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THE HISTORY OF VIOLENCE
(R, 96 MINUTES) |
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Canadian director David
Cronenberg, whose impressive oeuvre includes such disparate
works as THE DEAD ZONE, THE FLY, DEAD RINGERS, M. BUTTERFLY,
and SPIDER, has made what might be the best film of his career
with A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE. Loosely based on the graphic novel
by John Wagner and Vince Locke, the movie stars Viggo
Mortensen as Tom Stall, a quiet, easygoing family man who runs
a diner in a small Indiana town. But when two dangerous
criminals come into the restaurant prepared to wreak havoc,
Stall turns hero and shoots them both. After Stall's story is
blasted all over the media, Philly mobster Carl Fogaty (an
excellent Ed Harris) shows up, claiming that Tom is actually
former hit man Joey Cusack - and they've got some important
business to finish. While Stall insists that Fogaty is
mistaken, his family - his wife, Edie (Maria Bello); teenage
son, Jack (Ashton Holmes); and young daughter, Sarah (Heidi
Hayes) - gets dragged into the danger that constantly
threatens to explode. Cronenberg, whose films often deal with
the fantastical, the futuristic, and the supernatural, has
done a masterly job creating a wholly believable modern world
where evil lurks just around the corner. Howard Shore's tense,
moody music complements the outstanding acting in a violent,
powerful film that is not to be missed.
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