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Cast and Crew
Opens: December 10, 2008
Bottom Line: Clint Eastwood delivers one of his rare comic performances in a film that otherwise doesn't measure up to his recent outstanding works.
Walt prevents the theft and confronts the Hmong gangbangers who ordered the attempt. This turns him into something of a hero to the mother and older sister Sue (Anhey Her). There follows lowbrow comedy about gifts and food turning up on his porch until the food -- and beer -- win him over.
As face-saving penitence, the would-be thief named Thao (Bee Vang) -- Walt insists on calling him Toad -- is commanded by his mother to work off his debt to Mr. Kowalski. This predictably leads to a curt friendship between the two males separated by a generation, Walt's involvement in the immigrant community and ultimately his intercession on Thao's behalf with the gangbangers to tragic consequences.
That this mostly comic film turns tragic is a foregone conclusion as this mood change is signaled all along. (When a character spends an entire film coughing up blood, we don't imagine he'll be around at the end.) Yet Eastwood's direction cannot always smooth out the unevenness and forced situations in Schenk's script.
The story also betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of how gangs operate. They are multigenerational organizations with a structure and hierarchy. The elimination of a half-dozen fools will not destroy a gang.
The Hmong actors, Her and Vang, are exceptional; you can tell Eastwood spent time on their scenes to let the shine. The other young actors -- Latino, black and Asian -- all must play gangster cliches. Christopher Carley as a fresh-from-the-seminary priest and John Carroll Lynch as Walt's barber who joins with his client to "man up" the defenseless Thao deliver well-played comic characters. As for Eastwood, his bark is much worse than his bite.









