Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

The Judge Keeps You Riveted With Powerful Performances

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 19 Oct, 2014 12:49 AM
  • The Judge Keeps You Riveted With Powerful Performances
Cast: Robert Downey Jr, Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Billy Bob Thornton, Vincent DaOnofrio, Jeremy Strong, Dax Shepard and Leighton Meester
 
Director: David Dobkin
 
Rating: * * *1/2
 
Director David Dobkin's "The Judge" is not just a courtroom drama. The pivot of the story is in fact an estranged father-son saga.
 
Hank Palmer (Robert Downey Jr), the suave and successful Chicago criminal defence lawyer in the midst of a divorce, has turned his back on Indiana, and on his family, particularly his father Judge Joseph Palmer (Robert Duvall). He is seething with a strong sense of betrayal, although it is revealed subtly. The news of his mother's demise takes him back home after 20 years.
 
"Nothing changes," Hank mutters to himself as he drives into Indiana after several years.
 
Metaphorically too, nothing has changed between him and his father who holds him responsible for jeopardising his brother Glen's bright career in baseball. Glen (Vincent D'Onofrio) was grievously injured in a road accident when 17-year-old, Hank was at the wheel.
 
The undercurrents of tension, the sardonic barbs between the father and son have in no way diminished with the passage of time. The funeral over, Hank is heading back to Chicago.
 
 
A hit-and-run accident of a former convict, which lands his father, Judge Palmer in the dock, is the turning point. Even though their relationship is far from perfect, Hank offers to defend him.
 
The courtroom drama is indeed interesting, but it is the father-son relationship that is even more engaging. The scene with the tornado as the backdrop, where Hank confronts his father, giving vent to his deep-seated animosity for his father, accusing him of "running the house as he runs the courtroom", is gripping. The petulant Duvall is equally a powerhouse of emotions, giving credence to his reasons for being strict with his son.
 
The film has a mix of the poignant and the powerful with some humour thrown in for good measure, albeit through gibes and sarcasm.
 
It is a treat to watch Robert Downey Jr. after a long time in a new avatar. He delivers a power-packed performance with a broad spectrum of emotions ranging from the smug lawyer who does not hesitate to relieve himself on a rival lawyer in a courtroom urinal and nonchalantly says, "Innocent people cannot afford me" to the caring son who sensitively handles his father in the bathroom during a bout of incontinence without hurting his ego.
 
As a criminal defence lawyer defending his father in the court, Downey Jr. is razor-sharp in his legal jargon, as he is in portraying the myriad emotions that flit through his face.
 
His only competition is from Robert Duvall, as the disciplinarian, ethical, 72-year-old judge with an indefatigable spirit even when his health is failing. He has his weak moments when he admits that he pardoned convict Blackwell and let him off with only 30 days of imprisonment, because his "wilful disobedience and recklessness reminded him of his middle son, Hank."
 
There is Jeremy Strong as Dale, Hank's differently-abled, younger brother who is forever, filming and capturing life though his camera. He delivers a sensitive, but fairly predictable performance.
 
Vera Farmiga, as Sam, Hank's heart-broken childhood sweetheart, and Vincent D'Onofriao as Glen, Hank's embittered older brother, are convincing. Leighton Meester as Carla, intended for the glamour quotient, fails to impress.
 
 
Cinematographer Janusz Kaminski captures rural Indiana perfectly. Whether it is Hank cycling furiously on lush green lawns and experiencing liberation or the father-son fishing scene -- these are pure visual delight. What adds to the aesthetics of the frames, is the lighting which is deliberate. It succeeds in creating the apt effect, although dramatic.
 
Overall, what keeps you riveted to this oft-heard story is without a doubt, the powerful performances.

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

'Blended' is Refreshingly Entertaining

'Blended' is Refreshingly Entertaining
Overall, compared to their previous collaborations, director Frank Coraci's third rom-com partnership between Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore hits an above average mark that's worth a viewing.

'Blended' is Refreshingly Entertaining

'Citylights': An ode to the city's invisible populace

'Citylights': An ode to the city's invisible populace
Citylights" is Hansal Mehta's ode to the invisible people, those people populating the pavements we often see from our moving cars

'Citylights': An ode to the city's invisible populace

'The Raid 2' - packed with classic visuals, but mindless

'The Raid 2' - packed with classic visuals, but mindless
Presented through an undercover policeman's point of view, it is a convoluted crime saga designed in a Godfather-style father-son crime drama with a whole sub-set of assassin characters who have their own storylines and sequences.

'The Raid 2' - packed with classic visuals, but mindless

X-Men: Days of Future Past lacks 'X' factor

X-Men: Days of Future Past lacks 'X' factor
Overall, with nearly 25 characters to track, fleeting between time zones, space and technically brilliant visuals, concentrating on the film becomes a tedious affair.

X-Men: Days of Future Past lacks 'X' factor

Heropanti is a one-time watch

Heropanti is a one-time watch
"Heropanti" is a full-on 'paisa vasool' Sajid Nadiadwala entertainer. It doesn't quite measure up to the requirements of the theme of honour killing that it so valiantly puts forward. But as a masala entertainer, that has more to say than one would expect from a film of this nature, "Heropanti" gets its fundas right.

Heropanti is a one-time watch

Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film

Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film
"Kochadaiiyaan" as a Rajinikanth film has all the elements to satisfy his fans but as an animated feature, which is used making motion capture technology, fails to live up to the expectations of all those who watch a Rajinikanth film just for the sake of entertainment

Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film