Ronin

Reviewed by: Cllrdr

September 26, 1998

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You'll be happy to know that Frankenheimer redeems himself. Not that it's that great a movie. It isn't. But it's made by a director who knows what he's doing and how to do it well, every step of the way. Pushing 70, Frankenheimer shows upstart punks like Michael Bay what a REAL action movie is all about. He never piles on. There are several car chases, but they're of varing lengths with different sorts of impact. He doesn't escalate the violence every for cheap thrills. In many ways its a film about *temps morts* -- something which DeNiro is past master of. He gives the sort of performance lesser actors like Spencer Tracy are wildly overpraised for. A Euro-thriller drenched in late Melville atmospherics ( the title itself a hommage to "Le Samourai") it features nice bits by Michel Lonsdale, Feodor Atkin, and Jonathan Pryce. Stellan Skkarsgard is becoming a really reliable pro. Jean Reno is, as usual, a comfortable old shoe. Only the female lead disappoints. But her character is something of a lout anyway, so it might have been the part as much as the performer. The scenes shot in what now must be referred to as the Princess Di Memorial Tunnel are in many ways worth the price of admission. Still, it's a movie that's not really about anything. Except, perhaps, honor among tough guys so-macho-they-don't-have-to-show-how-macho-they-are.
 

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