Directed by: Steven Knight.
Written by: Steven Knight.
Starring: Tom Hardy (Ivan Locke), Olivia Colman (Bethan), Ruth Wilson Ruth (Katrina), Andrew Scott (Donal), Ben Daniels (Gareth), Tom Holland (Eddie), Bill Milner (Sean), Danny Webb (Cassidy), Alice Lowe (Sister Margaret), Silas Carson (Dr. Gullu), Lee Ross (PC Davids), Kirsty Dillon (Gareth's Wife).
You
could hardly have a simpler premise for a movie than the one in Steven Knight’s
Locke. The entire film takes place inside of a BMW SUV driven by Ivan Locke
(Tom Hardy) who makes a series of phone calls in the film’s 90 minute runtime.
A lot of these conversations have to do with a concrete pour happening the next
day – apparently the largest “non-nuclear, non-military” pour in European
history. Locke was supposed to oversee this pour, but now he won’t be able to.
He has a “family problem” that he has to take care. When he’s not talking to
his boss or his underling or any number of other people about concrete, he’s
talking to his wife or one of his two sons and trying to explain what is going
on. Finally, there are various conversations about the cause of all his
troubles (which I won’t reveal). And that’s it. There is no action, no car
chases or shootouts. The film is 90 minutes of Tom Hardy talking on the phone.
And it’s wonderful.
Much
of the credit for the success of the movie is due to Tom Hardy – who has become
one of those actors who I look forward to in every movie he’s in. He can
singlehandedly make a movie as forgettable as John Hillcoat’s Lawless
memorable, if only because of his strange, mumbling performance. He was able to
make Bane into a truly frightening villain, and then in the end much more a
scared little boy than anything else. He reminded me of Brando with his small
role in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, being a sensitive tough guy. And he can over
the top brilliantly like in Nicolas Winding Refn’s Bronson. He has the looks
and charm of a movie star – but the skill of a character actor. In Locke, he
delivers one of his best performances. He plays a man whose world is crumbling
all around him, but he tries to remain calm and focused – he has to drive,
first of all – but he also needs to keep his head to ensure that those he’s
talking to keep theirs. He only allows anger to seep through when he’s not on
the phone at all – but is instead talking to his father in the backseat (who
isn’t there) as he explains that he will not become the man his father was. He
refuses to lie – because after all, lies got him into this mess, and he doesn’t
want to be that person anymore. He made one mistake but he’s not trying to
avoid responsibility – but instead trying to ensure he steps up and behaves in
a moral way, after behaving in an immoral way. It’s a rather complex
performance in many ways – he has to convey a wide variety of emotions, without
leaving the driver’s seat of his car – but he also has to be interesting enough
that the audience doesn’t get restless watching the film. Hardy nails it.
But
credit must also go to writer/director Steven Knight as well. One could argue
that the film is a gimmick film – and they wouldn’t exactly be wrong – but
credit goes to Knight for embracing that gimmick, and riding it all the way. Do
you remember the Wes Craven film Red Eye with Cillian Murphy as a psychopath on
a plane and Rachel McAdams in the seat next to him? That movie worked
wonderfully right up to the point where they abandoned the confines of the
aircraft and then it became a typical thriller. Knight follows through on his
premise right to the bitter end – and it works so well, that even if the last
moment in the film isn’t overly original, it still had me shedding a few tears.
Knight is mainly known as a screenwriter – for film as brilliant as Stephen
Frears’ Dirty Pretty Things (2002) and David Cronenberg’s Eastern Promises
(2007). This is his second directing effort – following last year’s Redemption
with Jason Statham (which I didn’t see, but sounded like it may be somewhat
different, at least as far as Jason Statham movies go). Along with
cinematographer Haris Zambarloukos, Knight finds an interesting way to shoot
the movie – and editor Justine Wright works wonders at subtly building the
tension in what is nothing more than Hardy and the voices on the other on the
other end of the phone. Dickson Hinchliffe’s score is never overbearing, but
helps set the mood at every stage.
A
movie like Locke is proof that you don’t need big special effects or a large
cast to make a great movie. Locke is modestly scaled, and yet it works better
than most movies do with far more money being spent. It’s a film that
concentrates on writing, directing and acting above everything else. Its stakes
are small, but it’s so well done you don’t care. This is an antidote to all
those blockbusters we’re already seeing – and that will dominate theaters this
summer.
This sounds very interesting. This is totally random but I heard and interview with Ryan Murphy this morning - he was talking about a movie he just directed called "The Normal Heart." It will be on HBO soon, May 25th. It looks wonderful and wanted to give you a heads up if you hadn't heard of it..I can't wait to see it...and maybe this one too.
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