While he's off changing his middle name to "danger", revelations occurring at home put the very family he's trying to protect at risk.
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Forced to repay a debt, John must take on a dangerous job to keep his family safe. Now turned straight, he's dragged back into it when his dim-witted brother-in-law (Jones) pisses off Giovanni Ribisi's local tough bastard. Not so long ago Wahlberg's John Bryce and his best friend Chris (the always watchable Foster) were infamous amongst the criminal elite for their smuggling skills.
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The overall film is a little disjointed, but generally enjoyable. A blue collar family man who was once a top drawer smuggler, it plays to the Bostonian Oscar nominees ostensible strengths tough, but sensitive when applicable. Perspiration-creation duties are therefore handed to Kormákur, and having directed two of Iceland’s best-known films, 101 Reykjavik and Jar City, he makes the most of this chance to prove that he’s more than a match for even the larger-scale action scenes, igniting an armoured car robbery which, aside from giving the benchmark scene from Heat a run for its money, is all the more impactful for arriving - like the director himself - seemingly out of nowhere.A remake of an Icelandic thriller, it's easy to see why Wahlberg really went after this film. Wahlberg is well within his comfort zone, surrounded by superior acting talent (as he is in all his best films, notably The Departed), selling the action scenes but never making us sweat as much as the material wants us to. Although the plot relies a little too heavily on contrivances, coincidences and predictable betrayals, the heist itself unfolds with a technical precision that would make David Mamet proud, and there’s a clever running joke (which only the audience is in on) involving what appears to be a paint-spattered tarpaulin, carelessly shoved in the back of the van, which is being used to transport the ‘funny money’ Farraday’s (Wahlberg) gang is trying to steal. Nevertheless, in the tradition of the genre’s most entertaining entries, the thieves’ plan is so complicated, it’s hard to imagine how they can possibly pull it off in the first place, never mind after things go, as they tend to in films of this kind, catastrophically wrong. Such familiar elements aside, Contraband has much to offer audiences who prefer their armed robbery movies infused with the kind of gritty realism rarely found in recent genre entries such as Fast & Furious Five. (At least one member of the original cast, Icelandic-American Ólafur Darri Ólafsson, reprises his role.) K.Simmons as the captain of the ship which the ‘heroes’ (read: the thieves and criminals we’re meant to root for) use to transport the titular contraband. Stronger support comes from Diego Luna, as the psychotic leader of a Panamanian crime cartel, and J. Adding to this sense of familiarity are clichéd characters, Beckinsale’s by-the-numbers perfect-wife-in-peril being the main offender, and gifted actors in roles we’ve seen them play before: Giovanni Ribisi as a greasy, tattooed redneck, and Ben Foster reprising his Alpha Dog role as a grade-A fuck-up. Like the original, Contraband loses points early on for its unapologetic reliance on the ‘ex-criminal-dragged-out-of-retirement-to-pull-one-last-job’ plot catalyst, a crime genre trope so ancient it should be claiming a pension of its own.
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Now, the artist formerly known as Marky Mark has hit the top spot at the US box office with this gritty, grainy and fitfully gripping heist movie, co-produced by Wahlberg and the UK’s own Working Title, and faithfully adapted from Óskar Jónasson’s 2008 Icelandic thriller, Reykjavik-Rotterdam, which director Baltasar Kormákur produced. Having recently turned 40, however, Wahlberg has also turned a corner: his anchoring performance in The Fighter (which he also produced) gifted Christian Bale an Oscar, while decent straight-man turns in Date Night and The Other Guys reinforced his comedy credentials.
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If Mark Wahlberg is anything like the protagonist of Entourage, the HBO show inspired by his own experiences, it’s no wonder his résumé includes such low points as The Happening, Max Payne, and a trio of shameful remakes (The Truth About Charlie, Planet Of The Apes, The Italian Job), as though a real-life equivalent of Turtle has been guiding his career from inside a haze of blunt smoke.