By Mark Burger
Story
Filmed four years ago,
Slow Burn’s uses shades of
The Usual Suspects, a film it tries way too hard to emulate and ends up being convoluted and often confusing.
Ray Liotta plays Ford Cole, an ambitious District Attorney of an unnamed American metropolis, who is having an affair with Nora Timmer (
Jolene Blalock), his bi-racial assistant D.A. When she kills a man (
Mekhi Phifer) she claims raped her, the matter turns out to be anything but open-and-shut, much to Cole’s personal and political chagrin. It turns out that Nora and the dead man were also having an affair. Is Nora the woman that Cole thinks she is? Hmm, maybe not. Then there’s Luther Pinks (
LL Cool J), who claims to be a friend of Isaac’s and whose version of the story is very different than Nora’s. The beleaguered Cole must ascertain who’s telling the truth and who’s not. He obviously hasn’t seen enough movies like this one, because it’s a forgone conclusion that most everyone’s lying.
Acting
Despite its many flaws,
Slow Burn is made watchable thanks to its cast, most of whom transcend the tricky material. Like
Michael Douglas,
Liotta (also the film’s co-executive producer) is one of those actors we love to watch losing it. He has ample opportunity to do so here. If you can buy
Blalock as a
femme fatale, then it isn’t much of a stretch to believe that her character is bi-racial. She’s simply not that strong an actress to pull off the constant sleight-of-hand the character demands.
LL Cool J, who seems to be making a career out of movies that spend most of their time on the shelf (
Mindhunters and
Edison Force, anyone?) plays it cool, which is about all his role affords.
Taye Diggs pops up briefly as a prison informant, while
Chiwetel Ejiofor plays a magazine reporter dogging Cole’s campaign. There are nice bits by
Guy Torry as Cole’s right-hand man on the police force, who’s (understandably) baffled throughout, and by veteran
Joe Grifasi as a desk sergeant with too much time on his hands. Best of all is the ever-reliable
Bruce McGill, as the chief of police and no fan of Cole’s. It’s the sort of hard-boiled role that
McGill (also recently seen in
The Lookout) can--and has--played with ease many times before, but
McGill plays it with scene-stealing aplomb.
Direction
As first-timer, director/screenwriter
Wayne Beach lobs twists and turns left and right with
Slow Burn, but he isn’t able to maintain consistency or a semblance of credibility. To Beach’s credit, there are some intense moments and a couple of sardonic laughs in
Slow Burn. It isn’t nearly as bad as its lengthy stint on the shelf might indicate, but it’s nothing special, either. Beach’s previous screenwriting credits include the
Wesley Snipes vehicles
Murder at 1600 and
The Art of War, neither of which were particularly distinguished but passed the time relatively painlessly anyway. Add
Slow Burn to the list. There’s nice cinematography from two-time Oscar nominee
Wally Pfister (
Batman Begins,
The Prestige– both of which he made
after this film). It is appropriately gritty and stylish in the proper film noir tradition. So,
Slow Burn does have a few things going for it, save for the Friday the 13th release date. As if it weren’t jinxed enough already.