Four Brothers movie review, John Singleton, Mark Wahlberg, Andre '3000' Benjamin, Tyrese Gibson, Sofia Vergara, Chiwetel Ejiofor. Review by Rob Blackwelder ©SPLICEDwire
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REVENGE GONE WRONG
A scene from 'Four Brothers'
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"Four Brothers"
2 stars
108 minutes | Rated: R
WIDE: Friday, August 12, 2005
Directed by John Singleton

Starring Mark Wahlberg, Andre Benjamin, Tyrese Gibson, Garrett Hedlund, Sofia Vergara, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Josh Charles, Terrence Howard, Dax Ravina, Fionnula Flanagan, Franky G



 OTHER REVIEWS/COMING SOON
 
  • John Singleton
  • Mark Wahlberg
  • Tyrese Gibson
  • Sofia Vergara
  • Chiwetel Ejiofor
  • Josh Charles
  • Terrence Howard
  • Fionnula Flanagan
  • Franky G


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    Asinine finale, lack of clarity sink film about 'Four Brothers' looking to avenge their foster mother's murder

    By Rob Blackwelder

    Mark Wahlberg is perfectly cast in "Four Brothers" as an angry, scruffy Detroit greaseball who returns home for the first time in years to avenge his foster-mother's murder during a convenience store robbery.

    While not an actor known for his emotional range, here his soft-featured scowl embodies resounding heartbreak without giving an inch on the kind of toughness and bravado that makes his character a loose cannon. How loose? He even tells the investigating cops (one an old friend played by the sublime Terrence Howard) who come to pay their respects that "I'm not here for the funeral."

    Reunited with his three brothers -- fellow former delinquents adopted by the kindly but adamant Evelyn Mercer (Fionnula Flanagan), and played by Garrett Hedlund ("Troy") and talented rappers-turned-actors Andre Benjamin and Tyrese Gibson -- it isn't long before they're literally beating a path through the ghetto toward any suspects they can get their hands on. And it isn't long after that before a conspiracy begins to emerge (the details of which are never entirely clear) involving bankruptcy and insurance money, connections to the mob, and crooked cops and city councilmen.

    Inspired by Westerns and Blaxploitation flicks of the 1970s (the soundtrack is even heavy on the Motown), director John Singleton (who made "2 Fast 2 Furious" and "Baby Boy" with Gibson) fills the screen with moody darkness that makes it clear the Mercer boys' impulsive, haphazard vigilantism is not only risking their lives, but also taking a toll on their souls (something the family man among them realizes all too well). Singleton gets another kind of tension from a pair of incredibly executed action sequences, one a midnight car chase on dangerously icy streets and the other an out-manned, out-gunned firefight that could be straight out of a Sergio Leone picture.

    But despite the film's strengths -- including strong, diverse lead performances that breathe with authentic brotherly love (and brotherly teasing), and the gifted Chiwetel Ejiofor ("Melinda and Melinda," "Dirty Pretty Things") playing a gangster so chilling his very presence on screen can put you on edge -- "Four Brothers" falls apart completely in the last act.

    A total fantasy almost laughably dependent on every villain behaving with 100-percent predictability (and exactly on cue) as the Mercer boys spring their traps for retribution, the absurd finale is a fatal blow to an otherwise solid, gritty revenge movie in which a few lesser shortcomings are easily forgiven or forgotten.









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