‘Man on Fire’ is overly doused in bloody revenge
JOHN DEPKO
High-gloss production values and first-rate acting are evident
throughout every twist and turn of “Man on Fire.” But this quality
treatment by a major studio cannot hide the fact that this is a
formula action film with a schizophrenic twist. Beginning as a sweet
story of redemption and newfound friendship, it becomes a predictable
tale of bloody revenge and serial killing where gruesome torture and
death are the order of the day.
Denzel Washington is undeniably excellent as a burnt-out, hired
killer who takes on a simple assignment at the end of his career. He
becomes the bodyguard of the 10-year-old daughter of a wealthy
Mexican businessman. The first half of this overlong film is a total
chick flick. It covers the deepening relationship between a
hard-boiled gunman and a very cute girl who is wise beyond her years.
The brutal second half of the film begins when the darling daughter
is kidnapped by a ruthless ring of kidnappers whose leaders operate
at the highest levels of the police and government.
The setup to make the audience hate the bad guys is long and slow
and deliberate. It has to be so. The viewer needs to hate the bad
guys in a visceral way to be able to watch the many grisly scenes
where they are dispatched into the next world in the most macabre
ways imaginable. This film is very well made but the last hour has
the B-movie feel of Charles Bronson’s “Death Wish” series. You can
admire the technical quality of the effort while you realize it’s a
familiar story that’s been told a thousand times before.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.