Snitch (2013) [Blu-ray]
Action | Drama | Thriller
Dwayne Johnson explodes into action as a man determined to bring a Mexican cartel to its knees. Johnson stars as a successful businessman who learns his son faces 10 tough years in a Federal hole for drug possession. Convinced it was a set-up, he
volunteers to become an undercover informant and infiltrate a ruthless cartel. Now, with his back against the wall and his life totally on the line, he must expose the true criminals before they discover his identity.
Storyline: Construction company owner John Matthews learns that his estranged son, Jason, has been arrested for drug trafficking. Facing an unjust prison sentence for a first time offender courtesy of mandatory minimum sentence
laws, Jason has nothing to offer for leniency in good conscience. Desperately, John convinces the DEA and the opportunistic DA Joanne Keeghan to let him go undercover to help make arrests big enough to free his son in return. With the unwitting help of an
ex-con employee, John enters the narcotics underworld where every move could be his last in an operation that will demand all his resources, wits and courage to survive. Written by Kenneth Chisholm (kchishol@rogers.com)
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman on June 6, 2013 -- From tiny (well, actually gargantuan) scorpions, mighty movie stars grow. Few probably expected much from the erstwhile Rock, one Dwayne Johnson, when he
appeared in CGI form as a massive scorpion in a kind of teaser coda in The Mummy Returns, a role that was expanded into featured territory in The Scorpion King. But unlike other muscle bound hunks from both the WWE and WWF who have attempted
to matriculate their wrestling careers into big screen stardom, Johnson didn't just have the requisite charisma, he had a sort of self deprecating quality that seemed to suggest to audiences that he wasn't taking himself too seriously and also that he
seemed to know that he wouldn't be accepting any Academy Awards anytime soon. While no one would accuse Johnson of threatening Daniel Day-Lewis in terms of versatility, he has nonetheless shown a propensity toward easily handling both light comedy and
action Snitch is a somewhat new genre for Johnson. While it has some action elements, Johnson isn't a strutting muscle head taking out a coterie of bad guys. He's a fairly typical father attempting to deal with a son who has made a disastrous
mistake, and who himself becomes ensnared in an ever deepening miasma of problems when he attempts to extricate his son from those issues. This gives Johnson an opportunity to emote more than he has typically had, even in his non-action roles, and the
good news is he acquits himself quite admirably. Unfortunately, the film itself doesn't fare quite so well. Despite bearing the questionable imprimatur that it's based on true events, Snitch strains credulity to the breaking point at several
key junctures, leaving Johnson's character a man adrift in a completely unlikely ocean of political machinations and crime syndicate shenanigans.
Snitch cuts to the chase, not wasting time on silly things like character development or setting up an overly intricate plot. We see teenager Jason (Rafi Gavron) Skyping with a buddy of his named Craig. Craig is evidently regaling Jason with tales
of a drug fueled rave he's just hosted, and he lets Jason know that he wants to ship a large supply of drugs to Jason so that he doesn't have to carry them on a plane. Jason hems and haws, and kind of says "no", but the Skype call is interrupted by
the return of Jason's mother, Sylvie (Melina Kanakaredes). The film then switches to contruction company owner John Matthews (Dwayne Johnson), who is attempting to grow his company in a tricky economy. It quickly becomes apparent that Sylvie is John's
ex-wife and Jason is his estranged son when the package is delivered, Jason takes delivery, and discovers a DEA tracking device in the bottom of the box. An arrest quickly ensues, and John and Sylvie are informed that mandatory minimum sentencing requires
a ten year prison sentence—unless Jason, like his friend Craig, rats on someone else. Unfortunately, Jason refuses.
John calls in a few favors and wrangles an introduction with local U.S. Attorney Joanne Keeghan (Susan Sarandon) and, after a few intermediary plot machinations, ultimately manages to get the recalcitrant prosecutor to agree to a trade of sorts. John will
somehow get her the goods on a member of a drug cartel, and she in return will reduce Jason's sentence to one year. John's liaison is actually one of the cops who collared Jason, an undercover guy named Cooper (Barry Pepper), who is not at all sure this
is a good idea. Even Keeghan herself does a sort of "Impossible Missions Force" disclaimer, averring that the risk is entirely John's in this escapade, and that she will wash her hands of it should it not succeed.
In one of this film's too convenient coincidences, it turns out a hard working guy at John's company is a twice convicted felon with major connections to the drug cartels. Daniel (Jon Bernthal) is actually shocked when John asks for his help in meeting
someone up the drug cartel food chain, since he's trying to walk the straight and narrow path. When John offers a rather sizable bribe, Daniel finally relents, and introduces John to Malik (Michael Kenneth Williams), a pretty vicious thug who is
nonetheless only a small cog in a very big wheel. Malik is a little suspicious, but when John tells him his trucking entities are a perfect way to move drugs, Malik sets up a little delivery, insisting that Daniel ride shotgun, something Daniel is loathe
to do.
It's at this point that Snitch starts to go at least slightly off the rails. In a plot move that defies logic, John and Daniel manage to complete their "assignment", and John thinks Cooper, who has been tracking things from a safe distance, will
close in and make arrests, thereby starting the process to free Jason. But Cooper decides not to arrest Malik, thinking he can actually do better than Malik. Rather than honor her original agreement, Keeghan goes along, insisting that John
has to continue working with the drug cartel until the real kingpin (and they actually use the term kingpin) is brought to justice.
Snitch then veers perilously close to more traditional Johnson action fare, as John comes in contact with a suave but menacing drug lord (Benjamin Bratt) and attempts to thread the needle by seeming to work with the cartel while making sure his son
is kept safe until he can be released. Playing into this is the fact that Daniel has believed that John is running drugs to make some extra scratch to keep his company alive, but ultimately becomes aware that John is actually working with the Feds. Daniel
is certain that the cartel will kill them all if they find out. What's a father to do?
In fact, fatherhood is the subtext throughout Snitch. John feels guilty that he more or less abandoned Jason when he divorced Sylvie. Daniel, too, has a young son who is being recruited by gang members, and the prime reason he accepts John's
bribe is to get his family to safer quarters. Even the drug lord played by Bratt has a little boy who plays into the film's climax. Snitch makes the none too subtle point that blood is thicker than water, even when millions of dollars are at stake.
But the film is a bit too contrived for its own good, as exemplified by a head scratching comment by Keeghan toward the end of the film. She holds a press conference, showing wads of cash and announcing several arrests, and then she thanks John, lamenting
the fact that she can't tell everyone what he did. What she seems not to realize is that the preceding ten minutes of the film involved a manic freeway chase between several cars and John's semi rig, resulting in several spectacular crashes and
lots of gunfire. Well, maybe it was a busy news day that day, and none of that made the evening broadcasts.
Snitch is an interesting opportunity to see Dwayne Johnson play at least a moderately vulnerable character, and he does rather well in this film. However, Snitch becomes increasingly ludicrous as it goes on, capped by an admittedly exciting
chase sequence that nonetheless puts the lie to the thesis that everything is happening undercover. Waugh's contention that sentencing guidelines are woefully out of whack are an obvious target, and if Snitch doesn't hit that target with anything
approaching finesse, it's at least a worthy subject for discussion and indeed a film. Recommended.
[CSW] -3.1- This is actually a dramatic crime thriller that is effective and interesting. The ex-con employed at Johnsons company that introduces him to the low-end drug dealer, plays his role so effectively that you begin to resent Johnson for getting
him involved in this mess. On the negative, it is hard to swallow Johnsons character is willing to sacrifice so much (he and his family's safety, his business, and the ex-con's safety) in order to get his sons sentence reduced. But that aside this is an
excellent thriller which takes Johnson away from all the loud action and silly kid films he has been doing the past 10 years. Give it a chance and check it out. At a minimum it is worthy a rental.
[V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC -No D-Box motion codes were available at the time of this rental although they are available now.
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