Antoine Fuqua’s adaptation of the beloved, at least by me,
1980s television series “The Equalizer” bears almost no resemblance to the show
except for a loose set up and the name of the protagonist. It offers even less
in the way of surprise, but that doesn’t stop it from being nuts and awesome. And
as much as I enjoyed the show when I was a kid, if this was on my TV now, I
would tune in to each and every damn episode. The film continually ramps ups to
such lunatic heights that eventually the protagonist, in true action movie
form, slowly walks away from a full-size tanker he just blew without even
seeming to notice. Now walking away from an explosion is standard stuff—satirized
as it is in every way imaginable, from spoofs to car commercials—but the way
the film approaches this moment is indicative of the overall manic approach.
It’s in the details, and how the film takes things to
previous unimagined heights of lunacy, where “The Equalizer” sets itself apart.
Not only does Denzel Washington’s Robert McCall (a role taken over from the now
deceased Edward Woodward) cause a single massive explosion, when the chain
reaction of blasts triggered by that explosion almost engulfs him, he
still doesn’t pick up the pace. From practically the first
frame, you know this is going to end in a violent clash inside the Home
Depot-esque hardware store where McCall works. Again, that’s to be expected.
What you don’t see coming, however, is that the movie combines the
showdown-in-a-place-with-lots-of-things-that-can-be-weapons trope with the
slow-motion-rainstorm-showdown. I don’t want to say anymore about it, but if
you’re asking yourself, aren’t they inside? The answer is yes, yes they are
still inside of a building.
Also, one of the villains may be the Devil, so there’s that.
We’ll get there eventually.
McCall lives a bare,
Spartan existence in a working class Boston neighborhood. He’s helpful and
pleasant, teasing his young slacker coworkers that he used to be a Pip, as in
one of Gladys Knight’s back up singers, helping a chubby clerk train to become
a security guard, and is generally an all around good dude. Still, as friendly
as he is, there’s a level of remove, of distance between himself and everyone
else. No one really knows anything about him, he has OCD like tendencies, and
something in his past haunts him to the point where he just never sleeps.
Instead, he spends his nights at 24-hour coffee shop where he reads classic
literature, organizes silverware, and banters with Elina (Chloe Grace Moretz),
or Teri as she’s professionally known, a young prostitute who keeps similar
hours and has dreams of becoming a singer.
Elina exists in the script as little more than an inciting
incident (and disappears in short order, this isn’t a story of connection, this
is a story of revenge and justice and setting things right), and when Robert
sees her get beaten by her Russian pimp, he can no longer sit back and idly
watch, his inner man of action takes over. First off, he murders an entire
roomful of connected Russian gangsters without batting an eye or even pausing.
And right out of the blue, “The Equalizer” shifts gears and becomes a violent,
borderline gory film.
You don’t take out the East Coast hub of the Russian mob
without someone noticing, and that’s where Martin Csokas’ Teddy comes in, sent
by his bosses cut through the Boston underworld, leaving a swath of bodies
behind him. On the surface he’s there to find answers, but he’s more delivering
a message than anything else. Russian criminals tend to write their histories on
their bodies in tattoos, like a resume, and Teddy, despite and oddly cuddly
name, is no different. Through this imagery, devil horns, burning skulls,
broken crosses, twisted religious symbolism etched into his skin, not to
mention the extreme close ups and pseudo psychedelic way Fuqua shoots a
shirtless Csokas, you have to ask yourself, wait, is he supposed to be the Devil?
It’s only one scene that introduces this idea, but once it’s
on the table, it casts a different shadow over everything that comes
afterwards. Though it fades into the background as you gain distance, it
provides the story with a slight elevation in scope and scale, heightening the
already present good versus evil dynamic, but giving it a near biblical feel
for a moment, but just a moment.
One thing that’s easy to appreciate about “The Equalizer” is
that, as opposed to most films in this general vicinity, it never explicitly
spells out McCall’s background. He obviously comes from a military and
intelligence background. After a throwaway appearance by Melissa Leo and Bill
Pullman, you’re fairly certain it’s the CIA, but never 100 percent
explicit—it’s possible he just had dealings with them and allies in the
agency—but it doesn’t actually matter. To be honest, the most interesting part
about his background isn’t the background—no matter what story they gave him,
you would have heard it before—it’s what happens to him after he reverts back
to his old way of life, a way of life he obviously took great pains to remove
himself from. The deeper back in he gets, the less his compulsive behaviors
surface.
Viewed through this filter, McCall’s story is a voyage of
self-discovery, of a man returning to himself, allowing himself to be who he
really, truly is. The violence comes so natural to him—you never see him train
or maintain his skills like in other movies, but when he needs them, they’re
back in the snap of your fingers—that it’s obviously always been there, hidden
barely out of sight just below the surface. You come to understand that the only
way he can control these tendencies is through constant vigilance, through the
obsessive control of every exterior element of his life. His OCD isn’t a
reaction to his past, it’s a regulatory mechanism. He can’t even allow himself
the freedom to sleep because he’s afraid of what might happen when he
relinquishes that the reins. However, after dismantling that first crew of
Russians, which he knows can’t possibly be a one off, he sleeps like a damn
baby, at a weird kind of peace.
For his part, Washington is in that full on badass mode he’s
been in lately. There’s a lot of talk of Liam Neeson’s later career action
renaissance, but with movies like “2 Guns,” “Safe House,” and even “Book of
Eli” to an extent, a 59-year-old Denzel still kicks a healthy amount of ass. In
“The Equalizer” he never tries to be intimidating, and even after you see
firsthand what he’s capable of, you’re never frightened of him. He’s got a
code, and if you’re not a piece of shit, if you’re not hurting innocent people,
he has no beef with you.
What posturing he does, primarily with Teddy, isn’t so much
about swagger and who has a bigger dick, it’s more you know who I am, you know
what I’m capable of, so if you choose to engage me, you know what to expect.
There’s a no nonsense, matter of fact air to Robert that sets him apart from
other action leads. He doesn’t have anything to prove, there’s no chip on his
shoulder, and in reality, it’s not even personal, he’s just standing up for the
little guy, and there are many times when he’s downright charming about it.
“The Equalizer” is not a lightning fast actioner. This is a
steady, gradual build that culminates in a tense, damn near dialogue free third
act where the film feels like the time for words has come and gone and now is
the time to get down to the serious business of fucking shit up.
Fuqua does his job along the way, though, keeping things
interesting to look at. His camera is almost always moving, always in motion,
panning, pulling, and, in rare cases, flipping you completely over a
character’s head. This gets a bit tricky when you just want to show a close up
of a man, alone, sitting in a coffee shop contemplating life, and this motion is
so ubiquitous that it’s most noticeable in the rare instances where it’s
absent, where the frame is finally static. Within this he adds stylized
flourishes to the violent encounters. Watching McCall dismantle the room full
of Russians in a flurry of near video game manic action is fun, but you start
to worry that it’s all going to be like that. This trend actually abates as the
movie progresses, thankfully, and settles down into a much more practical,
vicious approach.
A lot of people are going to dismiss “The Equalizer” as just
another action movie, and it’s not going to be for everyone, but there’s much
more than that going on. It’s familiar to be sure, nothing the plot does will
surprise you in any way, it’s like they cut and pasted the story from any of
dozens of other movies you’ve seen before. But at the same time, while there’s
nothing particularly interesting happening on a surface level, a subtext of
strangeness runs below the action, and hanging over the top there’s such an
insane, action genre one-upsmanship going on that it’s difficult not to be
engage and even harder to look away.
1 comment:
Real Drama Fascinating to watch A repeat movie to see over again. 5 stars
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