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Harry Brown DVD Review: Elders Gone Wild

Harry Brown Movie

While geeks have monopolized movies for some time now as unlikely wimps turned he-men and superheroes, apparently old geezers would like their turn too, if Daniel Barber’s senior slasher spree Harry Brown is any indication. And while extreme wish fulfillment fantasies in a movie can be quick fix self-confidence boosters, however peculiar, trying this homicidal revenge out in the real world is not recommended. Especially for those prone to chronic cardiac conditions and advanced arthritis.

Harry Brown Movie

Michael Caine is Harry Brown, the meek chess enthusiast turned wheezing septuagenarian serial killer in question, consigned by economic circumstances to living in a crime-ridden London housing project. Following the death of his invalid wife and murder of his terrorized, military bayonet wielding chess partner and best friend by local juvenile delinquents in quick succession, Harry goes ballistic, and appears to succumb to post-traumatic senior citizen syndrome.

Not that he’s a novice when it comes to torturing, maiming and incinerating potential adversaries. It seems that Harry learned a thing or two about interrogating and slaughtering suspects while stationed as a marine in Northern Ireland way back when. And he’s still quite handy with a bullwhip when extracting confessions from a kid with a paper bag over his head, since according to this movie there’s no difference between freedom fighters and psychopaths. Abu Ghraib anyone?

Assessing the police as powerless to assist, in particular fretting but frail head detective Alice Frampton (Emily Mortimer), Harry goes free lance undercover, infiltrating the indoor marijuana farm presided over by the reigning young thugs. And while the dapper elder’s house call shopping for a gun to allegedly kill pigeons should have been an automatically suspicious giveaway as to his true intentions, the gang may have been too stoned on their own product to notice. In any case, the youthful villains can be spotted immediately even without any supporting criminal evidence, since they all have bad teeth, massive tattoos, and seem to speak English backwards. At least to an untrained Yankee ear.

Caine’s geriatric vigilante sniper who escapes from a hospital bloodied but unbowed to save the nation, may have some justified gripes against UK ghetto youngsters with bad behavior. But the ‘don’t trust anyone under thirty’ generation gap carnage that ensues with violence as the sole problem solving solution, is really not the kind of role model example that the community elders should be setting, by killing them all and sorting them out later.

And though the never disappointing Caine can turn whatever shoddy thriller into a near masterpiece, even if he might opt to play Godzilla somewhere down the line, there’s something radically distasteful about a film that blames the faceless masses living in miserable poverty for their own plight. Especially when it’s thespian affluent have’s impersonating the demonized have-nots in a movie.

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Rated R

one [out of 4] star

DVD Features: Audio commentary: with Michael Caine, director Daniel Barber and producer Kris Thykier; Deleted Scenes.

Prairie Miller is a New York multimedia journalist online, in print and radio, who reviews movies and conducts in-depth interviews. She can also be heard on WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network’s Arts Express.

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