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Running Scared

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
41
Mixed or Average Reviews
out of 100
'Running Scared' Is a Trip
By John Hartl, film critic, MSNBC

Writer-director Wayne Kramer works hard to turn his latest picture, "Running Scared," into an operatic, unpredictable and thoroughly outlandish crime drama. Shooting for the sublime, he mostly achieves the ridiculous.

If you saw his 2003 film, "The Cooler," you know he can't resist coincidences and limitless plot twists. But he couldn't pull off the crazy premise of that film, and he's no more successful with the outrageous storyline of his new movie. At first, "Running Scared" appears to be a straightforward if rather artily photographed melodrama about a small-time gangster named Joey Gazelle (Paul Walker) who gets in trouble when a neighbor's abused child, Oleg Yugorsky (Cameron Bright), borrows his gun. Earlier in the day, during a disastrous shoot-out, the gun was used to kill an undercover cop, and Joey is desperate to retrieve it.

Eventually Joey's own son Nicky (Alex Neuberger) and his wife Teresa (Vera Farmiga) get involved, and so do a pushy detective (Chazz Palminteri) and several other crooks. In scene after scene, guns are pulled and directed at people's heads as the characters try out every conceivable variation on the "F word."

But what's really distinctive about the picture, and what makes it memorable in a bad-movie kind of way, is how it stops telling this story and jumps down the rabbit hole to pursue other narrative options.

Kramer takes one long detour for a nostalgic monologue that deals with the obsolete phenomenon of condensed 8mm versions of feature films (John Wayne's "The Cowboys" comes in for a shellacking). Later he introduces a seemingly benign couple who specialize in imitating "Sesame Street" hosts as they kidnap and torment small children.

There's also a prolonged, spectacular shoot-out in a hockey stadium, which escalates from hockey pucks used as lethal weapons to machine guns aimed at a child. As with so many episodes in "Running Scared," the color is drained and desaturated, editing tricks play with time, and Kramer's transparent attempts at trying to be different simply become laughable.

The absurd digressions suggest Quentin Tarantino, the obsession with non-stop profanity hints at David Mamet, the visual style recalls Tony Scott and Oliver Stone's transformations of Tarantino's scripts, but the lunacy is all Kramer. If you bought the premise of "The Cooler," well, welcome to "Running Scared."

Kramer did guide Alec Baldwin to his only Oscar nomination for "The Cooler," although he hasn't worked similar wonders with Walker, who disappears for surprisingly long stretches. He's better when he's cast as heroic characters like the one he plays in the current Disney hit, "Eight Below."

Kramer is more successful with Farmiga, who recently won the Los Angeles Film Critics' award for best actress for the little-seen independent film, "Down to the Bone," and brings a touch of class to this project. He also makes good use of Bright, who capitalizes on the spooky persona he established in "Godsend" and "Birth," while adding a dash of mischief that couldn't be more welcome.

More movies on MSNBC 

Writer-director Wayne Kramer works hard to turn his latest picture, "Running Scared," into an operatic, unpredictable and thoroughly outlandish crime drama. Shooting for the sublime, he mostly achieves the ridiculous.

If you saw his 2003 film, "The Cooler," you know he can't resist coincidences and limitless plot twists. But he couldn't pull off the crazy premise of that film, and he's no more successful with the outrageous storyline of his new movie. At first, "Running Scared" appears to be a straightforward if rather artily photographed melodrama about a small-time gangster named Joey Gazelle (Paul Walker) who gets in trouble when a neighbor's abused child, Oleg Yugorsky (Cameron Bright), borrows his gun. Earlier in the day, during a disastrous shoot-out, the gun was used to kill an undercover cop, and Joey is desperate to retrieve it.

Eventually Joey's own son Nicky (Alex Neuberger) and his wife Teresa (Vera Farmiga) get involved, and so do a pushy detective (Chazz Palminteri) and several other crooks. In scene after scene, guns are pulled and directed at people's heads as the characters try out every conceivable variation on the "F word."

But what's really distinctive about the picture, and what makes it memorable in a bad-movie kind of way, is how it stops telling this story and jumps down the rabbit hole to pursue other narrative options.

Kramer takes one long detour for a nostalgic monologue that deals with the obsolete phenomenon of condensed 8mm versions of feature films (John Wayne's "The Cowboys" comes in for a shellacking). Later he introduces a seemingly benign couple who specialize in imitating "Sesame Street" hosts as they kidnap and torment small children.

There's also a prolonged, spectacular shoot-out in a hockey stadium, which escalates from hockey pucks used as lethal weapons to machine guns aimed at a child. As with so many episodes in "Running Scared," the color is drained and desaturated, editing tricks play with time, and Kramer's transparent attempts at trying to be different simply become laughable.

The absurd digressions suggest Quentin Tarantino, the obsession with non-stop profanity hints at David Mamet, the visual style recalls Tony Scott and Oliver Stone's transformations of Tarantino's scripts, but the lunacy is all Kramer. If you bought the premise of "The Cooler," well, welcome to "Running Scared."

Kramer did guide Alec Baldwin to his only Oscar nomination for "The Cooler," although he hasn't worked similar wonders with Walker, who disappears for surprisingly long stretches. He's better when he's cast as heroic characters like the one he plays in the current Disney hit, "Eight Below."

Kramer is more successful with Farmiga, who recently won the Los Angeles Film Critics' award for best actress for the little-seen independent film, "Down to the Bone," and brings a touch of class to this project. He also makes good use of Bright, who capitalizes on the spooky persona he established in "Godsend" and "Birth," while adding a dash of mischief that couldn't be more welcome.

More movies on MSNBC 

75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Goes so far over the top, it circumnavigates the top and doubles back on itself; it's the Mobius Strip of over-the-topness. I am in awe. It throws in everything but the kitchen sink. Then it throws in the kitchen sink, too, and the combo washer-dryer in the laundry room, while the hero and his wife are having sex on top of it.Read Full Review »
75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
If you like kinetic movies about crime, criminals, and all sorts of bad behavior, Running Scared will catch and hold your attention.Read Full Review »
75
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
If Running Scared had come out in 1994, before "Pulp Fiction," it - and Kramer - would be hailed as blazingly original. But questions of originality notwithstanding, there's plenty of blazing going on here.Read Full Review »
50
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
Not surprisingly, everything feels begged, borrowed and stolen from other better movies, from Quentin Tarantino's exclamation-point violence to the slo-mo bullet trajectory shots from "The Matrix."Read Full Review »
50
The New York Times: Manohla Dargis
Even a talented lead couldn't save Mr. Kramer from himself. As a writer, he may have fashioned a genre-busting screenplay, one that has its postmodern cake and eats it, too, but as a director he proves himself as blood simple, if generally less adept, as any Hollywood hire.Read Full Review »
40
Village Voice: Luke Y. Thompson
Writer-director Wayne Kramer (The Cooler) is about as skilled at storytelling as Walker is at acting, which is to say not very.Read Full Review »
38
USA Today: Mike Clark
A potential howler done in by a tendency to wear too much body tissue on its sleeve.Read Full Review »
33
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Scott Brown
Running is a fevered smashup, as if Hollywood dug up Sam Peckinpah's corpse and forced it to adapt "Grand Theft Auto: Vice City" for the screen.Read Full Review »
25
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
A depressing piece of gun-crazy Hollywood scuzz that, with its gassy style and runaway immorality, makes a Tony Scott movie look like a Robert Bresson picture.Read Full Review »
20
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
It's lower on the food chain than a mere exploitation picture because it clings so desperately to the notion that it's a serious movie about violence; it doesn't even have enough integrity to serve up cheap, sick thrills for their own sake.Read Full Review »
See all Running Scared reviews at metacritic.com »