By: JWBM
Many of us have seen or heard of some bad things in our time—often dabbling with revolving questions as to the whys or hows. As terrible and backwards as these actions may seem, there is always some kind of motive or basis. However, fewer have encountered pure evil, or outright morally reprehensible actions that defy general reason or logic. The head scratchers: till your head starts to bleed from its nightmarish implications. These actions are predatory and purposeful, and executed by a higher than average intellect than your typical goon. As if a lion grew a conscious outside of basic instincts and started to look at anything beneath him as an object to toy with. When these dark and questionable things occur, we wonder how any human-being could have been behind them. Is that individual actually flesh and blood like you or I? You'd think this was primarily a question for a priest, but many detectives lay witness to scenes that the average person's eyes would come unglued from.
Detective John Hobbes is feeling on top of the world. He's done caught and bagged the infamous serial killer Edgar Reese, and is now about to watch his execution with a smug grin. Except soon afterwards more murders start to crop up that look suspiciously close to Reese's handiwork. At this point, nothing makes logical sense when the connections or evidence doesn't line up. The detective soon finds out that he may be in over his head when it deals with a power far beyond what he's capable of stopping as just a mortal man with a badge and gun.
The film employs a voice over narrative to give some further thoughts from Hobbes. At times it gives perspective, but at other times they should have scaled back and did a little more show than tell. Denzel Washington—as John Hobbes—gives the role some command and a natural flow in how he delivers his lines in real-speak. He's not just going for what's on the page, but brings to the table little subtleties to make the character feel like a real guy with an on-screen presence each time the camera is fixed on him. He portrays him as a man who was on top of the world—ready to take on any challenge—until he's slowly pulled down by its weight. Though not willingly. Elias Koteas gives a short, but memorable role as Edgar Reese: the emotionally disturbed man about to be executed, but has the enthusiasm of someone who just won a weekend trip to Disneyland for serial killers.
"Fallen" is a thriller bordering on horror that mixes a little bit of "The Exorcist III," "The Prophecy," and "Seven" with its own flair. It does a great job at balancing down-to-earth subject matters with others that may be normally looked at as far-fetched or out there. Those into "The X-Files"-like themes, might make a smooth transition into this story likewise from the '90s. "Fallen" takes them in stride and examines them one moment at a time. By keeping it basic, it flows with some finesse even after 20 years of hitting the big screen. The movie does add some dynamic to its pacing by sprinkling in bits of mystery, drama, and suspense. Though there are times where the film plods along; versus keeping your mind searching, or capable of examining deeper ideas beyond the ones shown. Then again, the story doesn't have the intention of being a race to the finish or biting off more than it can chew. Take that for what it's worth.
This makes for a simple tale, but a well-deserving experience due to the natural interactions between the characters, the real life looking settings, the memorable tones of the soundtrack, and the cinematography that gives another perspective besides what would normally be right in front of your eyes.
Rating: 7/10
Director: Gregory Hoblit ("NYPD Blue," "Primal Fear")
Actors: Denzel Washington, John Goodman, Donald Sutherland, James Gandolfini, Elias Koteas
Info: IMDB link
Trailer: Youtube link
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