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Alpha Dog |

Directed by : Nick Cassavetes
Writing credits (WGA) : Nick Cassavetes (written by)
Tagline: Inspired by true events
Cast : Bruce Willis as Sonny Truelove , Matthew Barry as
Interviewer , Emile Hirsch as Johnny Truelove , Fernando Vargas as Tiko "TKO" Martinez , Vincent Kartheiser
as Pick Giamo ,
Justin Timberlake as Frankie Ballenbacher
Runtime : USA:117 min (Sundance Film Festival)

Review: It goes
without saying that it's dangerous for a lamb to spend time in the
den of wolves, but when that lamb lingers longer than is necessary,
the result is guaranteed. Alpha Dog, the 2006 Sundance Closing Night
film whose resemblance to a real-life case engendered a lawsuit, is
about such a situation. It illustrates that not all master criminals
are masterminds and that not all "nerds gone wild" stories have
happy endings. Director Nick Cassavetes should be commended for the
unflinching manner in which he tells the story - it packs a punch,
although it lingers too long to be truly unsettling. There's an art
to figuring out when to end a movie and, at least on this occasion,
it eludes the filmmakers.
Alpha Dog transpires in the late 1990s and focuses on drug dealer
Johnny Truelove (Emile Hirsch) and his posse, which includes
jokester Frankie Ballenbacher (Justin Timberlake) and gofer Elvis
Schmidt (Shaun Hatosy). When Johnny has a falling-out with one of
his customers, Jake Mazursky (Ben Foster), who owes him money, all
hell breaks loose. The escalating conflict results in a prisoner
being taken: Jake's naïve younger brother, Zack (Anton Yelchin),
who's the lamb to Johnny's wolves. Although Zack is initially
kidnapped, he adapts to his captivity, playing video games with
members of Johnny's crew, drinking and doing dope, and flirting with
girls. It's paradise for this sheltered lad, and he doesn't want to
go back to being Mommy and Daddy's Perfect Boy. However, life
lessons for Zack aren't foremost on Johnny's mind. He's trying to
figure out the best way to stay out of prison or end up in a body
bag, and that may require Zack to be in a position where he can
never testify.
It's interesting to watch a movie in which the criminals are
incompetent wimps. Most of the time, bad guys in films like this are
equal parts geniuses and thugs. Johnny plays at being a
sophisticated badass, but when it comes down to it, he's a fraud.
He's not smart and he's intimidated by guns. There are several times
when he has a chance to pull the trigger but doesn't - it isn't a
case of him using restraint; he's plain scared. Johnny's playing the
role of the gangster until one of many unintelligent decisions puts
him in a situation in which the real-world consequences are severe.
Suddenly, the games are over.
Most of the characters are reprehensible - not the kinds of people
the average viewer would feel comfortable spending two hours
alongside. Then there's Zack. He's a good kid whose situation is not
of his own making. He happens to have a nutso brother and he pays
the price for the misfortune of having the same father as Jake.
Zack's story unfolds in a way that recalls Almost Famous - the
innocent thrown into a world of depravity where he finds temporary
bliss. In Almost Famous, the Magical Mystery Tour eventually ends
with a cold does of reality; that reality couldn't be any colder
than the one in Alpha Dog's final act.
The movie bypasses the perfect ending point - a stirring
mock-interview with Sharon Stone as Zack's mother - in order to
spend 15 extra minutes with Johnny and his cohorts. Although this
part of the movie offers the most explicit nudity in the film (from
a sexy Olivia Wilde), it feels extraneous and tacked-on. While Alpha
Dog may start out being about Johnny, he quickly becomes secondary
to Zack and Zack's developing friendship with Frankie, who has been
named as the kid's "handler."
As Zack, Anton Yelchin develops a sweet, baby-faced character in
which bookworms everywhere will recognize a kindred spirit. Zack is
every high school student who spent more time studying than
socializing. He's the Catholic schoolgirl who goes wild when the
restraints are removed. It's an effective performance, right to the
end. Also strong, perhaps surprisingly, is Justin Timberlake as
Frankie. It doesn't take long for the singer to shed his reputation
and do some real acting. Frankie is a tragic figure - a boy who's in
way over his head and ends up frozen in a state of moral paralysis
because he fails to see the one clear way out of what he believes to
be an inescapable trap. Ben Foster's Jake has it cranked up to "11";
he's channeling Dennis Hopper on speed. Emile Hirsch is adequate as
Johnny, but it's neither a memorable nor a compelling portrayal. A
little star power is provided by Bruce Willis in a small role as
Johnny's dad and an equally underexposed Sharon Stone as Zack's mom.
(One of those rare occasions when "underexposed" and "Sharon Stone"
can rightfully be used in the same sentence.)
Cassavetes approaches the subject matter with a clear eye and a
gallows sense of humor. Most of Alpha Dog's jokes are dark, darker,
and darkest. The film is designed to make viewers feel uncomfortable
and it punctuates that success with a gut-punch, even though we know
what's coming. Cassavetes isn't interested in generating suspense;
this is more of a study of human nature. The picture he paints isn't
pretty but, by all accounts, it's accurate at least insofar as
generalities are concerned. Alpha Dog isn't a happy movie, but it's
dramatically solid and the impressions it leaves will not be easily
shaken.
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