Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Film Review: Snitch


Snitch. Rated M (drug use and violence). 112 minutes. Directed by Ric Roman Waugh. Screenplay by Justin Haythe and Ric Roman Waugh.

Verdict: A terrifically intense thriller about how far a father will go to save his son.

This tense and tight thriller about just how far a father will go to save the life of his imprisoned young son absolutely scorches across the screen – wasting no time whatsoever in taking us into the murky underworld of drug trafficking.

When construction company boss John Matthews’ (Dwayne Johnson) son Jason (Rafi Gavron) is imprisoned for trafficking drugs, John decides to help the law enforcement agencies – led by Susan Sarandon’s US Attorney Joanne Keeghan – snare bigger fish in return for having his son’s sentence reduced. With the help of one of his employees Daniel (Jon Bernthal), who has a conviction for trafficking narcotics, John risks everything he has and the lives of everyone he knows to right a terrible wrong.

With its heart on its sleeve and a truckload of moral dilemmas to resolve, Haythe and Waugh’s terrific and efficient screenplay plays with almost impossibly high stakes. Every character has something incredibly important to gain or lose, and the way in which Jason is in worse and worse shape when John regularly visits him in prison is an extremely powerful motivator.

Wrestler turned actor Johnson (aka The Rock) delivers a solid performance as the indefatigable John Matthews, but it is the supporting cast assembled around him that really delivers the goods. Bernthal (The Walking Dead), in particular, is outstanding as John’s co-conspirator and delivers one of the best and most interesting performances of the year so far. Gavron (The Cold Light of Day) is excellent as the young man struggling to hold it together in jail, and as we watch him slowly deteriorating as a result of relentless assaults, it is not difficult whatsoever to appreciate why his father is taking the terrible risks he is to save his son’s life.

Antonio Pinot’s (Love in the Time of Cholera, The Host) score constantly powers the increasing tension and becomes a critical part of the film’s overall effectiveness, while Dana Gonzales (Empire State) continues to build his reputation as a cinematographer with some fine work, beautifully accounting for the film’s many changes in mood and tone.

But ultimately, this is stuntman turned director Waugh’s film, and with a powerful screenplay and precise direction of his excellent cast, he has successfully marked himself as a director to watch out for.

This review was commissioned by the West Australian Newspaper Group.

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