THE LAST CASTLE
In Brubaker, Robert Redford played an idealistic warden who took on a
corrupt prison system. Here he plays an inmate who takes on a corrupt warden,
the only difference being that this time out he's a three-star general
incarcerated in a military holding pen for disobeying an executive order. His
cool righteousness pisses off the initially admiring warden (actually a
colonel, played by Soprano James Gandolfini), and he winds up doing hard labor
-- going shirtless to reveal a sinewy and sculpted bod -- while professing he's
"just another inmate." Right. Then a superfluous stuttering simpleton dies, and
Redford leads the inmates in an insurrection that's executed with military
precision.
Critic-turned-director Rod Lurie has embarked on a career of smug political
deconstruction, and here, as in The Contender, he challenges the system
while waving the flag. But Redford is miscast -- he's too humane to be a
"warrior's warrior" and leader of legions. Delroy Lindo as a general formerly
under Redford's command and Mark Ruffalo as the prison-yard snitch are pluses,
but the film's hyperbole lays siege to this castle. At the Entertainment,
Flagship, Holiday, Hoyts Providence 16, Showcase, and Tri-Boro cinemas.
Issue Date: October 19 - 25, 2001
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