{"id":15727,"date":"2014-09-26T12:05:35","date_gmt":"2014-09-26T16:05:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.albany.com\/movie-blog\/2014\/09\/when-denzel-washingtons-does-the-math-it-always-adds-up-to-youre-dead-in-antoine-fuquas-the-equalize.html"},"modified":"2022-07-29T09:12:18","modified_gmt":"2022-07-29T13:12:18","slug":"when-denzel-washingtons-does-the-math-it-always-adds-up-to-youre-dead-in-antoine-fuquas-the-equalize","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.albany.com\/movie-blog\/2014\/09\/when-denzel-washingtons-does-the-math-it-always-adds-up-to-youre-dead-in-antoine-fuquas-the-equalize\/","title":{"rendered":"When Denzel Washington’s Does The Math It Always Adds Up To: ‘You’re Dead,’ In Antoine Fuqua’s The Equalizer"},"content":{"rendered":"
Antoine Fuqua’s music videos beginnings lend to his very particular cinematic style. From his feature debut with The Replacement Killers,<\/i> starring Mira Sorvino and Chow Yun-Fat (1996), an abundance of style, color, and scenes flipping between moody atmosphere and frenetic energy adorn everything he does.<\/div>\n
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An American Guy Ritchie with a little less bombast in his violence but a greater effort to flesh out his characters, he’s the gritty-crime-drama version of Five Guys Burgers – comfort food that’s dressed up nicely – for when you want something a little extra special but without the conservative formalities of fine dining. Think of former Denzel\/Fuqua collaboration Training Day<\/i>, Jamie Fox spy thriller Bait<\/i>, ensemble cop drama Brooklyn’s Finest<\/i>, Mark Wahlberg’s Shooter<\/em>, and Gerard Butler’s recent Olympus Has Fallen<\/i>. The Equalizer <\/i>is no different, and if what you want is a tense, bloody, organized crime revenge tale that’s steeped in that moody atmosphere and with unsually well developed characters for the genre, then Denzel and Fuqua set down in front of you exactly what you’d ordered.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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A little boy’s review of Antoine Fuqua’s The Equalizer<\/i>.<\/b><\/div>\n<\/div>\n
The Equalizer <\/i>begins quietly, following Denzel’s Robert McCall as he starts his day, before heading off to work at Home Mart (the film using a repurposed Lowes building supplies store). McCall’s dwelling is spartan. No television or paintings on the walls. The only light filters through the occasional window, casting gloomy shadows around the rooms. McCall brushes his teeth methodically, shaves his head with electric clippers, and checks his watch as he swipes any remaining inconveniences from his perfectly pressed, flat-front slacks and crisp, blue, button-down shirt. The apartment is deeply silent, excepting the isolated sounds of his preparation.<\/div>\n

McCall rides a bus to work, reading a book on the way, checking his watch again as he arrives at work, where he stocks shelves and responds to whatever banter other employees offer with charismatic non-committance. It should have been apparent to any viewer before he left his house that McCall had spent his entire adult life – until just before we meet him – in a military career, before moving on to this very deliberately, very quiet life, around nice, simple people. None of his old habits have waned, yet he seems well established in his new routine.<\/p>\n

Part of McCall’s routine involves helping others, including a Home Mart employee who’s determined to pass the security guard test, and Teri, a young customer (a hardly recognizable Chloe Grace Moretz) at the neighborhood late night diner – McCall’s one apparent indulgence. She’s determined she might one day be a singer, rebelling fiercely against the irreconcilable reality that she’s making her living as a Russian Mafia prostitute. “I think… you can be… anything – <\/i>you want to be,” McCall tells her, with a warm, paternal sincerity. They discuss a book he’s been reading.<\/p>\n

Fuqua’s efforts to craft a story with depth and texture can be seen and felt throughout these dramatic scenes, from start to finish. Readily digestible symbolism peppers the film, with greater effect than the the white globes of light marring many of the scenes from Fuqua’s Brooklyn’s Finest<\/i>, with the color palette here telling as much about a scene as the action or dialogue.<\/p>\n

McCall’s days are unusually easy to enumerate in this film, and yet every day he wears blue. Every day. And, his apartment is white, and the days are mostly grey. Until, that is, something changes his routine. He feels compelled to act against an injustice, and tries his best to resolve it with tremendous civility – but he’s now wearing black. There’s no question what this color means, and it should be noted the bad guy’s lair is painted entirely in black, though decorated with a Madonna and Child painting surrounded by an obnoxious, gilded frame, and numerous tattooed henchmen wearing gold jewelry, and an awful lot of skulls everywhere.<\/p>\n

Elsewhere in the film, characters wear other colors, suggesting vulnerability, authority, and balance. There’s a number of scenes where characters wear a shirt and vest, or 2 shirts, and again, the mixed colors reveal something about the character. Ultimately, a nice gray poplin tells us McCall’s prana has finally harmonized.<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n
The various books McCall reads also symbolize events in the story, helpfully signposting our progress through the tale, while clever music choices compliment the other elements within each scene. While many scenes omit scoring altogether, others include classical music, and most of the action scenes include various types of rock music (mostly Eminem). This is a juggling act Fuqua manages impressively.<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n
Fuqua goes even further imbuing every scene and character with added depth. As mentioned, McCall’s military background is established by his checking his watch, but even a low level thug’s personal life is painted all over the background of his scenes. Played by the ironically named David Harbour, slob of a cop-on-the-take ‘Masters’ can be described as a die-hard Bostonian and avid fisherman. How do we know? Late in the film, a scene opens with a wide shot of Master’s house, where a barely recognizable outboard motor peaks out from behind some bushes in the backyard. It might be mistaken as a barbecue grill, except for the word Suzuki silk-screened on the side. Inside the house, there’s a Red Sox banner on the wall, complementing the ball-cap he wore earlier in the film. Later in the sequence, Masters passes his garage, where numerous tails, formerly attached to bluefin, or maybe swordfish, are mounted along the outside wall. (Fish symbolism is ever-present, by the way.) This sort of detail can be found among many of the characters – we learn about them by what’s in the scene, not what’s being said.<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n
While more subtle or cerebral efforts in these textural embellishments could garner greater praise from some critics, it’s important to make the point lesser films would omit any of these efforts altogether, and after all, this film is a hyper-stylized revenge fantasy, not Jane Eyre<\/em>. And, while it’s not Jane Eyre<\/em>, and though the lowest Russian thug is amusingly named Slavi, because… why bother, the head of the criminal organization is named Pushkin. This may allude to real life Russian novelist and aristocrat Alexander Pushkin, noted for his literary “contrarities” within neo-classicism, Romanticism, and realism. Perhaps more on the nose, his works include The Bronze Horseman<\/i>, which stylistically parallels The Equalizer<\/i>‘s counterpointing tones, and Little Tragedies<\/i>, which includes a story on the fall of Don Juan, and the short piece Mozart and Saleri<\/i> which loosely resembles The Equalizer’s narrative. Fuqua should be commended for augmenting the film’s primary raison d’\u00c3\u00aatre, straightforward action, with a perfect complement of easily digestible literary sophistication.<\/p>\n

Acting is solid across the board, and largely exceptional. When does Denzel ever do anything that isn’t? Marton Csokas fills the shoes of McCall’s primary adversary, Teddy, and he’s superbly cast. Demonstrably sociopathic, yet eternally refined, scenes with Teddy and McCall crackle, particularly those with quiet dialogue.
\nAnd the action, while it develops slowly, builds nicely. Camerawork is at times clever, or cool – night vision and rifle scope point of views are a requisite for this type of film – but ultimately it’s all about McCall shaking of the cobwebs from his old skills, and taking down bad guys. Let’s just say that anything, literally anything, <\/i>can be a weapon to a trained killer, and McCall ultimately demonstrates he’s an exceptionally handy handyman.<\/div>\n

\n

Synopsis: In <\/i>The Equalizer, Denzel Washington plays McCall, a man who believes he has put his mysterious past behind him and dedicated himself to beginning a new, quiet life. But when McCall meets Teri (Chlo\u00c3\u00ab Grace Moretz), a young girl under the control of ultra-violent Russian gangsters, he can’t stand idly by – he has to help her. Armed with hidden skills that allow him to serve vengeance against anyone who would brutalize the helpless, McCall comes out of his self-imposed retirement and finds his desire for justice reawakened. If someone has a problem, if the odds are stacked against them, if they have nowhere else to turn, McCall will help. He is The Equalizer.<\/i> <\/i>– Sony Pictures<\/p>\n

The Equalizer <\/i>is particularly successful in using the medium of film for it’s most fundamental purpose: Show, don’t tell. If viewed from the perspective ‘form follows function,’ where the function is entertainment, The Equalizer<\/i> succeeds marvelously. It’s not quite Shakespeare, but solid stuff nonetheless.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

Materials Copyright 2014 Sony Pictures Entertainment\/Columbia Pictures<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Antoine Fuqua’s music videos beginnings lend to his very particular cinematic style. From his feature debut with The Replacement Killers, starring Mira Sorvino and Chow Yun-Fat (1996), an abundance of style, color, and scenes flipping between moody atmosphere and frenetic…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":154,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[18,21,39,67,92,145,162,198],"class_list":["post-15727","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-reviews","tag-albany-movie-reviews","tag-albanycom","tag-antoine-fuqua","tag-chloe-grace-moretz","tag-denzel-washington","tag-imdb","tag-jay-matthiessen","tag-local-movie-listings"],"yoast_head":"\r\nWhen Denzel Washington&apos;s Does The Math It Always Adds Up To: You&apos;re Dead, In Antoine Fuqua&apos;s The Equalizer<\/title>\r\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"The Equalizer is particularly successful in using the medium of film for it&apos;s most fundamental purpose: Show, don&apos;t tell. 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