Tag Archives: Patrick Wilson

Movie review: ‘The Commuter’ is ridiculous train wreck

Hear Tim Lammers’ review of “The Commuter” with Tom Barnard on “The KQ Morning Show” (Segment begins 10:30 in).

“The Commuter” (R)

Liam Neeson is rolling down an all-too familiar path with “The Commuter,” an action thriller that’s a mishmash of several action films, including “Non-Stop” (an in-air thriller that closely mimics this film), “Phone Booth,” “Murder on the Orient Express” and countless others. It’s clear at this point in his career that Neeson, who flirted with the idea of retiring from action films, is in it for the paycheck for this one, and he sleepwalks through what starts as interesting premise but quickly devolves into a manic, monotonous, well, train wreck.

The initial premise of “The Commuter” is promising, as Michael McCauley (Neeson) seems to have found a comfortable life as a life insurance salesman in the 10 years since he left the NYPD. But time has finally caught up with the 60-year-old worker, who is suddenly let go from his firm. Wracked with worry about how he and his wife (Elizabeth McGovern) are going to make ends meet and send their son to college, Michael is suddenly approached by a mysterious woman (Vera Farmiga) on his commuter train ride home. Her proposition is simple. Find a person on the train named Prin, who is carrying a backpack containing stolen device, and plant a GPS bug on them.

It’s a seemingly easy enough gig until Michael realizes that he’s made a deal with the devil. If he decides to walk away from the job, it will put his loved ones in peril, and if he carries through the job, there will be repercussions on that end, too. Looking for ways to get out of the quandary, Michael only makes the situation for himself worse by the minute.

Directed by “Non-Stop” helmer Jaume Collet-Serra (who also directed Neeson in “Run All Night”), the prospects of “The Commuter” building on the promise of its bright premise quickly fade as Neeson finds himself in implausible predicaments, yet, given the fact he is the man who will forever have “a particular set of skills,” manages to wrangle his way out of every single one of them. The film is also hopelessly predictable, which makes this ride a long and agonizing commute that’s in the end, just loud and annoying. The only way you could enjoy this movie is laugh at the ridiculousness of it all. But it’s not an action comedy. It’s an action farce.

Lammometer: 3 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for The KQ92 Morning Show,” “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC), “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere.

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Movie reviews: Tim Lammers talks ‘Conjuring 2,’ ‘Now You See Me 2,’ more on KQRS

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Click into the media player at 12 minutes in to hear Tim Lammers‘ reviews of “The Conjuring 2,” “Now You See Me 2” and “Warcraft: The Beginning” on KQRS-FM.

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Interview: Ashley Judd returns to roots with ‘Big Stone Gap’

Ashley Judd and Patrick Wilson in 'Big Stone Gap' (photo -- Picturehouse)

By Tim Lammers

While the new romantic comedy drama “Big Stone Gap” has a stellar ensemble cast that includes Ashley Judd, Patrick Wilson, Whoopi Goldberg, Anthony LaPaglia, Jane Krakowski, John Benjamin Hickey, Jenna Elfman and Chris Sarandon, Judd thinks the biggest star of the film may be the location itself: Big Stone Gap, Virginia, in the Appalachian Mountains.

In a recent phone conversation, Judd told me that she credits writer-director Adriana Trigiani with successfully bringing the beauty and feel of the town to the big screen. “Big Stone Gap” is based on Trigiani’s best-selling novel of the same name.

“Adriana is a beloved daughter of Big Stone Gap, and everyone in the film, apart from the actors from movies and TV who came in to do the film, is from there,” Judd said. “Plus, it’s was a gorgeous place for us to film.”

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Opening in theaters Friday, “Big Stone Gap,” set in the 1970s, tells the story of Ave Maria Mulligan (Judd), a self-declared spinster whose life is turned upside-down when she discovers a long-hidden family secret. On top of that, her longtime friend, Jack MacChesney (Wilson) has woken up to the fact that he’s in love with Ave Maria, but since he bumbles his way into telling her his true feelings, she feels like she has no choice but to finally leave her humble abode and start anew.

“Big Stone Gap” was no doubt a fateful project for both Judd and Wilson, since Judd was born and raised in nearby eastern Kentucky, and Wilson’s family has deep roots in the region. But Judd feels you don’t have to be from the area to relate to the film.

“It’s just a beautiful, idealistic setting, and I’ve been thinking a lot recently about small towns. ‘Big Stone Gap’ is a small town story and that’s why I think it has a wide appeal,” Judd said. “Frankly, people today think small towns only hearken to a nostalgic era. I think what I realized was, ultimately, we all come from small towns. Maybe this generation or the one before it didn’t come from small towns, but before that, they did, and that small town is such a part of our hearts.”

Judd said Big Stone Gap still has such of a hometown feel that at least one cast member not originally from the area became very attached to the town during the making of the film.

“We all stayed in people’s homes during the filming, and John Benjamin Hickey stayed in a local woman’s home where her dog was on its way to heaven. He got very emotionally involved with the dog,” Judd said. “It was a very unique movie.”