Breakdown
A white-collar weenie from Boston and his whiny wife drive their Jeep Cherokee
to a new life in California. To get there, they must pass through the
unforgiving desert inhabited by savagely debased humanity. That's the familiar
premise of Breakdown, and no sooner than you can say Straw Dogs,
the unpleasant couple are beset by the predatory local yokels, who kidnap the
wife and hold her for ransom. Stripped of the accouterments of civilization,
the weenie must fall back on his own instincts and manhood and fight back.
Before reaching that point, however, Breakdown slogs through more than
an hour of meandering exposition that is the cinematic equivalent of driving
mile after mile in the desert. It helps that the landscape is Monument Valley,
but the reminder of John Ford don't reflect well on this film's modest virtues.
Kurt Russell as the weenie is engaging casting, mostly because you wonder when
he's going to shake off the phony wimp act and become Kurt Russell. Ironically,
at the screening I attended, just as payback time began and the film was
building some suspense, it did break down -- the last reel was upside down and
in reverse. It might not have been the rousing climax that director Jonathan
Mostow intended, but it was in a larger sense a lot more satisfying. At the
Cinema World, the Entertainment Cinemas, Framingham, the Hoyt Franklin,
Leominster, the Solomon Pond Hoyt 15, the Worcester North Showcase, and the
Worcester Showcase.
-- Peter Keough
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