Shawn, his brother Mike and his friend TJ enter a
convenience store, and TJ decides to rob a woman in there, and ends up shooting
and killing her. Another bullet injures Mike. Shawn, in his narration, tells us
that this “set off a chain of events that we would all later regret.”
The lighting is a major problem in this film. The actors are often in shadow,
and it doesn’t seem like it’s by choice, but rather by lack of proper
lighting. When Li Ling, the Asian cashier at the store, tells the detectives,
“I no see face,” it doesn’t seem like she’s lying, like she’s saying
that because she’s scared to testify. I couldn’t see his face either, due to
poor lighting.
The narrator introduces every character. “That’s
Captain Harry Sawyer. He retired from the police department after thirty-two
years. A real law and order type of dude.” Yes, that’s the kind of dialogue
we have to listen to throughout the film. And watch Harry’s insane reaction
when he learns his wife has been killed. Soon Harry’s granddaughters arrive
(cue the terrible emotional music – the score is yet one more major problem),
and one of them says, “We’ll get through this together, the way Grandma
would have wanted it.” Have I mentioned how bad the dialogue is?
This movie also has several pointless flashbacks. In one
of them, we see the chick that wants to be DA as a child. One of her friends
says, “Come on, girls, we need to start working on our realistic career
aspirations.” Really? That’s what these kids are doing? Another long,
fruitless flashback involves an aborted oil change. The flashbacks become more
and more risible. Check out the one after a little girl begs Harry, “Please
don’t kill my mommy.” Oh, that reminds me: Harry of course starts
investigating on his own, since he was a cop and it was his wife that was
killed. But nothing ever comes of that. That’s the way this movie is. But in
the middle of all this, there is a wonderful scene with two women named
Bernadette and Yvette, who are questioned by the detectives. They are the only believable
characters, and their scene is by far the most enjoyable. Bernadette is playing
by Shellita Boxie, who turns in a really good performance.
The movie keeps introducing people, and you wonder
briefly if they might have anything to do with the plot, if perhaps they’ll
help get it going. But in most cases, no, they don’t. This movie is
amateur hour through and through. It seems like there was no storyboarding or
planning of any kind. I mean, who are the main characters? What is the film’s
point of view? What is it trying to say? This movie pretends to be about an
innocent man wrongly accused of murder. On the DVD cover it says, “Sometimes
the innocent have to go beyond… The Breaking Point.” But Shawn is far from
being innocent. He is a thug. Sure, he didn’t pull the trigger, but he is an
accessory to murder. And then in an effort to avoid jail, he commits another
crime – he breaks into the store that night in order to steal the surveillance
tapes. But he can’t find them. Do the cops have them? No, apparently no one has
them. It’s another element that never pays off. Why didn’t the cops ask about
the tapes when they arrived on the crime scene? I don’t think it’s that the
detectives are lazy; I think it’s the writers who are lazy. Yes, writers. It
took two people to write this script. Wow.
The Breaking Point was released on DVD on October
27, 2015 through MVD Visual. The DVD includes five minutes of behind-the-scenes
footage and the film’s trailer.
No comments:
Post a Comment