Tony Goldwyn

The Mechanic

First Hit: I liked the first film with Charles Bronson and I fully enjoyed this one with Jason Statham.

Charles Bronson had the look and feel of someone who was very tough with hidden intelligence.

Jason Statham as Arthur Bishop plays The Mechanic as intelligent first and physically tough second but when required he is tough really tough.

Bishop gets misled into killing his best friend Harry McKenna (played by Donald Sutherland) and mentor based on fabricated evidence. When he learns that he was tricked, he decides to mentor McKenna’s wayward and intense son Steve (played by Ben Foster) to be a mechanic. Together they do a couple of jobs and then go after Dean (played by Tony Goldwyn) who put out the hit on Harry.

Not all the kills involve bombs or guns. Many of them are stealth in nature and require lots of planning. This film does it well and Statham does it very well.

Statham is perfect as the quiet, straight forward, intelligent and focused mechanic. Sutherland is believable as Statham’s mentor. Foster is really good as the wayward mixed up son who needs to find a life path. Goldwyn is good as the ego driven guy who thinks he’s got everything under control but finds his ending commensurate with his actions. Simon West directed this with effectiveness.

Overall: Although the film is about killing effectively, it was enjoyable and well done.

Conviction

First Hit: A good film even though one knows from the beginning how it ends.

Sam Rockwell plays Kenny Waters as a thinking and yet unthinking man who grew up with few boundaries.

Hilary Swank plays Betty Anne Waters as always looking up to her brother and caring for him as their mother couldn’t and wouldn’t. As children we see them always fighting for and protecting the other.

Their mother was non-existent and spent her time working and sleeping around with other men. The only father figure they had was their grandfather. Living in a small town created circumstances that whenever there was trouble Kenny was one person the police looked at as being the possible culprit because often he was.

When a woman is found stabbed and bludgeoned to death, they picked up Kenny, try and convicted him. He claims innocence and Betty of course uses all means to save her brother.

The film takes place over an 12 – 16 year span and during this time Betty goes to school, works full time, gets a degree, attends law school and passes the bar. She does this so that she can get Kenny out of jail.

Assisting Betty is Abra Rice (played by Minnie Driver). Abra works with Betty, assists her with her studies, prods her during downfalls, and ultimately joins the crusade to free Kenny.

It’s a wonderful story about brotherly and a sisterly love and the connection between two people. One downside is that their aging wasn't represented very well it was uneven.

Rockwell is an extremely intelligent actor and this part allowed him to be boundless which at times didn’t work for me. At times when he acted out it may have been in the script but I felt that Rockwell was too smart a person to have acted the way he did. Swank, as is customary, gave an all-out performance in a admirable but not noteworthy role. Driver was very good as the open forgiving friend showing that friendship can survive ups and downs. Pamela Grey wrote a good script which effectively lays out this story. Tony Goldwyn did a good job of directing the actors and guiding the story.

Overall: This is definitely a good film to watch on the couch with family.

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