Assault on Precinct 13 (review)Jailhouse Wreck So, we're told as Assault on Precinct 13 opens, this is "A Why Not Production," which pretty much sums up the attitude behind the endeavor. "Why Not steal the title of an old cult favorite and slap it on a shoddy, contrived action movie and pretend it's a remake? Who's gonna stop us? You?" No, you will be the bitch of the Why Not people, lured into the movie theater by a trailer that's more exciting and more coherent than the film itself is, and even having paid your ten bucks, you will sit there and wonder, Why Not just walk out? I say, Go for it, because it all just keeps making less and less sense as it unspools, though it does also get funnier, too, so that by the time Ethan Hawke has escaped the precinct under assault -- come on, you knew he would -- to chase a bad guy into the thick forest that has mysteriously materialized behind his Detroit police station, you're gonna need the good guffaw that boneheaded moment of cinematic nonsense provides. Hopefully, John Carpenter banked a nice chunk of change for letting the Why Not people swipe his title and the barest skeleton of his concept, because I'm afraid that rather than drum up interest in his 1976 film, potential new audiences for it may be turned off, if they end up thinking the two movies have something in common besides a name. A police precinct is closing down, and on the last night before the shuttering, the few cops and civilian staffers holding down the fort come under seige from forces outside. There endeth the similarities. The cities are different -- here it's Detroit; in 1976 it was Los Angeles -- the bad guys and their motivations couldn't be more dissimilar, but most importantly, the tone and the attitudes about law and order, about filmed violence, and about what is thrilling and terrifying on film are a universe apart. Actually, to ascribe deliberate tone and attitude to this new Precinct 13 is giving it more credit than it deserves. This is like a tenth- Of course, director Jean- All of which only compounds this problem: Precinct 13 is the kind of movie culture warriors look to when they complain that Hollywood has inured us to violence, not merely by depicting it but by playing the bloody, drawn- |
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Wed Jan 19 05, 2:45PM categories: reviews permalink infoMPAA: rated R for strong violence and language throughout, and for some drug content viewed at a semipublic screening with an audience of critics and ordinary moviegoers official site IMDB tip jarshare
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