'Repo Men' Takes One Back

By Michael S. GoldbergeriBerkshires Columnist
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Popcorn Column
by Michael S. Goldberger  

Universal Pictures
A job's a job... until you get a conscience.
In the not-too-distant future conceptualized by director Miguel Sapochnik’s "Repo Men," it is apparent no health care reform was passed back in 2010. Funny, though…rather than inspiring the sick and infirm to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps, the lack of dignifying legislation has more than ever rendered folks beholden to the company store.

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The scenario is nightmarish. While it’s great that advanced technology allows The Union – a Big Brother-like medical supplier – to provide the ill with virtually any organ or body part they need, the firm’s unchecked power creates a  cautionary tale. If you can’t make the payments on that new ticker, The Union comes and gets it.

You see, it appears this merciless new world also didn’t rein in a predatory financial system. Hence chances are good you’ll be defaulting on that shiny fresh liver. Honcho Frank, realized with slimy opportunism by Liev Schreiber, adamantly dissuades his salespeople at The Union from making cash deals. Far more profitable, credit is king.

Morality seems to have been expunged from society’s considerations. It’s just bad for business, which is what allows our title characters to go about reclaiming all manner of innards without compunction. Rationalizing the bloody coldness of their careers, repo men Remy (Jude Law) and Jake (Forest Whitaker) echoingly affirm, "A job is a job."

Adapted from Eric Garcia’s novel, "Repossession Mambo," co-authored by Garrett Lerner, it’s a wonderfully insane premise. And it splatters a few interesting thoughts. Unfortunately, the portentous, sci-fi facet of the tale is soon body-snatched, lock, stock and pancreas, by a gory and gratuitous fright flick that won’t be denied its primacy. 

And truth be told, once you witness our boys descend on some poor unsuspecting debtor for the purpose of literally ripping out his pump, you’ve seen enough. Furthermore, the cat-and-mouse tale that ensues following Remy’s change of heart, so to speak, follows the usual formula employed whenever an insider thinks outside the lines and goes rogue.

But the especially bloodthirsty should be satiated. For lack of a creative plot structure, the film gleefully repeats ad nauseam, and in various permutations, its confiscatory operations. This continues right up until an ending that, lo and behold, recalls a ploy Dickens at times used in his serializations.


Otherwise, absolutely nothing justifies using that author’s name in the same breath as "Repo Men." This is slice and dice repulsion, albeit dished out via some pretty good performances. And while there’s nothing here that will win an award, the opportunity for some tongue-in-cheek hamming isn’t lost on Whitaker and Schreiber.

But Law, handed the responsibility of representing the metaphor that is central to any science fiction film worth its prognostications, plays protagonist Remy fairly straight. Added to his career angst, the concurrent revelation that a failing marriage just isn’t worth salvaging gives double-whammy status to his grand epiphany.

He flees, but towards what is uncertain. So when in doubt, there’s noting like a new romantic interest to help put things in perspective. She is Alice Braga as Beth, a homeless mass of indebted, but nonetheless nicely put together, parts. Living by her wits and a sultry voice she occasionally exercises in a nightclub, she is also supporting a drug habit. 

Their cave of Tristan and Isolde is stashed in that haphazard landscape of the future that’s held sway with art directors ever since "Blade Runner" (1982). Gosh, this world needs a good scrubbing. But as long as the rich are comfortably ensconced in their ivory towers, why supply the rabble with clean streets and a safe infrastructure?

Bringing the social analogies one step further, we don’t have to guess what the gist is when, needing a new kneecap on the run, Beth introduces Remy to the unlicensed, black market docs who practice in back alleys. By now we are too numb to be truly shocked when an 8-year-old girl performs the procedure under the watchful tutelage of her mom. 

There is decent muckraking amidst this distasteful smudge and sleaze: a warning of the inhospitable horizon that awaits humankind if compromise and compassion can’t trump blind ideology. But there’s an inherent catch-22. Anyone with a 15-year-old’s intelligence should already know this stuff. And this is most certainly an R-rated picture.

Still, beware my optimism. In the spirit of current debate, wherein the idea is that we all deserve a fair shake, I’m stirred to find the good even in a mediocre movie. While my inner adolescent welcomes the refresher course in human rights, the repulsive route "Repo Men" takes to make its point surely should keep it from stealing viewers’ hearts.

"Repo Men," rated R, is a Universal Pictures release directed by Miguel Sapochnik and stars Jude Law, Alice Braga and Forest Whitaker. Running time: 111 minutes.
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Friends of Great Barrington Libraries Holiday Book Sale

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The Friends of Great Barrington Libraries invite the community to shop their annual Holiday Good-as-New Book Sale, happening now through the end of the year at the Mason Library, 231 Main Street. 
 
With hundreds of curated gently used books to choose from—fiction, nonfiction, children's favorites, gift-quality selections, cookbooks, and more—it's the perfect local stop for holiday gifting.
 
This year's sale is an addition to the Southern Berkshire Chamber of Commerce's Holiday Stroll on this Saturday, Dec. 13, 3–8 PM. Visitors can swing by the Mason Library for early parking, browse the sale until 3:00 PM, then meet Pete the Cat on the front lawn before heading downtown for the Stroll's shopping, music, and festive eats.
 
Can't make the Holiday Stroll? The book sale is open during regular Mason Library hours throughout December.
 
Proceeds support free library programming and events for all ages.
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