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COLLATERAL
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An average, blue collar, workaday man finds he's gotten into a situation larger than he can imagine and has no way out. Hitchcock must be glowing in his grave, and its fodder I've attempted to create for years. Such an utterly fate-worthy chain of events linking these two together, and inevitably, as the movie continues, we see, as do the two characters here, that they have a lot more in common than they think. It's almost stupid to not realize that Michael Mann must have had Hitchcock in mind when the script was being written, because there's just no other explanation for the story that is so clearly influenced by Hitchcock's films. Heavily reminiscent of the masterpiece "Strangers on a Train"; two strangers by luck of fate, find themselves in a humongous situation, it's almost poetic. The film is pulled off very well from beginning to end establishing the tension which slowly mounds as we start from an all too mundane situation of Max driving his taxi along the streets of LA. The realistic, handheld almost candid digital direction works as Mann portrays LA like Scorsese to New York, with an almost grim, dark, grimy attitude that often looks like a literal waste land void of emotion, and it fits the atmosphere Mann attempts to convey to the audience that will involve these two strangers. Jamie Foxx gives a great and very inspired performance as Max who finds himself in a jam he can't possibly get out of, and holds his own against Cruise becoming one very fascinating reluctant hero. Max is enough of an interesting character for audiences to learn about him for the first twenty minutes of the film without ever getting bored, and once he's confronted by Vincent, he becomes even more three- dimensional. There's even a really good scene with Jada Pinkett establishes Foxx' character's personality and lets Pinkett shine for a few minutes as the two spawn a flirtatious relationship. Cruise with his shaggy white hair, bushy white eyebrows, and menacing and very devilish smile make him a villain not to be forgotten any time soon, and the relationship and interplay here is the equivalent of the two characters in "The Hitcher", in which they're constantly testing one another. Cruise exploits and explores a dark side in Foxx' character that he doesn't know he had, plus he also helps him come out of his funk he's been in during his life, while also being able to discover something about himself in the process. The relationship and interplay
between these two characters is electric and dialogue between them is
just natural as we witness two very three-dimensional people having a
back and forth duel of words while discussing the integrals of right and
wrong and murder that really manages to stand out amidst a movie that
looks like just another thriller. The screenplay is, dare I say, worthy
of Mamet. Mark Ruffalo, who is literally in every independent film I've
seen,
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