Small Town Crime *** /
*****
Directed by: Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms.
Written by: Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms.
Starring: John Hawkes (Mike
Kendall), Anthony Anderson (Teddy Banks), Octavia Spencer (Kelly Banks), Robert
Forster (Steve Yendel), Clifton Collins Jr. (Mood), Jeremy Ratchford (Orthopedic),
James Lafferty (Tony Lama), Michael Vartan (Detective Crawford), Daniel Sunjata
(Detective Whitman), Don Harvey (Randy), Stefanie Scott (Ivy), Caity Lotz
(Heidi), Dale Dickey (Leslie), Michelle Lang (Tina), Stefania Barr (Kristy), Victor
Medina (Fredrico), Sean Carrigan (Julian), Adam Johnson (Oliver).
The new neo-noir film Small Town
Crime stars John Hawkes as an alcoholic ex-cop, who will eventually decide that
maybe becoming a private investigator would be more his speed. That way he can
drink to excess, and not have to obey any of those pesky laws cops are supposed
to follow. The film honestly feels almost like a pilot episode of the type of
cop show you may see on AMC or FX or HBO – and may well be very good. Hawkes,
in particular, is very good in the movie – he’s pretty much the whole reason to
see the film, which otherwise feels rather one-dimensional, with a case at its
core that frankly isn’t all that interesting or tricky to figure out. Still, if
they announced today that yes, this really was just a pilot, and a new show was
debuting soon – or that this was going to launch a series of Mike Kendall
mysteries movies with Hawkes, I’d gladly watch the result.
Hawkes’ Mike Kendall is a drunk,
who we first see passed out in his house, while outside his hot road is parked
on the lawn, having mowed down the white picket fence surrounding it. All
Kendall wants to do is get back on the police force – but that isn’t likely to
happen, as he was drunk on duty when an shooting ending up killing three
people, and while its debatable as to if the result would be different if he
were sober, it’s still not a good look. He will happily keep cashing his
unemployment checks and go drinking every night – especially since his adoptive
sister Kelly (Octavia Spencer), and her husband (and Kendall’s drinking buddy)
Teddy (Anthony Anderson) are willing to help cover the mortgage.
But things change early one
morning when Kendall wakes up in the desert, and as he’s driving back to town,
finds a young woman who has been brutally beaten, and left at the side of the
road to die. He takes her to the hospital, where a couple of former colleagues
thank Kendall, but tell him to stay out of the way of what becomes a murder
investigation. Kendall, of course, will not – and eventually makes friends with
the girl’s rich grandfather (Robert Forster), who isn’t happy that his
granddaughter is dead, even if she had become a drug addicted prostitute.
Eventually, Kendall will come in contact with more and more unsavory people,
and a bigger conspiracy than he realizes.
To be honest, most of the plot of
the movie seems to be on autopilot – a dead prostitute means eventually we’ll
be introduced to other prostitutes, at least one pimp, and sooner or later, the
rich men who want to keep their dalliances with said prostitutes quiet. You
know the drill, and Small Town Crime doesn’t deviate from it. There are also
characters here that don’t seem to make a lot of sense, and are often
jettisoned for large chunks of the plot – like Octavia Spencer, too good for
her pretty much meaningless, small role. The film, written and directed by
brothers Eshom and Ian Nelms has an interesting character at its core, and not
a lot else.
This is one of the best pulp fiction crime movies I have seen in a long time. It's both gritty and funny in parts. The characters are awesome and the story and pacing just roll.
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