Film Reviews
Harsh Times
- Rating:

- Director: David Ayer.
- Starring: Christian Bale, Freddy Rodriguez, Tammy Trull, Eva Longoria.
- Details: US, 119mins, 15.
Dangerously unhinged ex-Army Ranger Jim David (Bale) leaves Mexico for LA promising his girlfriend Marta (Trull) that he will send for her once he finds a job. However, when he is rejected by the LAPD he cruises around town with unemployed best friend Mike (Rodriquez), much to his live-in girlfriend Sylvia's (Longoria) chagrin. What starts out as two childhood friends letting loose soon turns into an inescapable nightmare of drugs, guns and women.
Sometimes it's all in the title and if your movie has a bleak, hopeless theme about desperate men with nothing to offer society, then you can't go wrong with a name like Harsh Times. Every scene here reinforces writer-director David Ayer's idea that the social order is crumbling and even if people wanted to do something to stop the growing apathy towards social values, they would find themselves helpless to stem the tide. It's a grim, downbeat film and although Ayers covered similar themes (and storylines) with his own Training Day, Harsh Times is an altogether darker film. It is only when Ayers attempts to comment on the big issues like government subterfuge, outsourcing and corporate greed that the dialogue can get a little clunky but Bale and Rodriguez's verbal deliveries elevate it above just pontificating. Bale is a movie star in the truest sense of the word; unafraid to play the bad guy, he can veer widely diverse characters in American Psycho to Batman Begins to The Machinist with ease. Here he shows again what a commanding actor he is. Playing a character who is a rash of contradictions - a loving boyfriend, a cold, professional killer, a pitiful loser and a demented psycho - Bale convinces in every facet. Freddy Rodriguez, who was the best thing in HBO's Six Feet Under, is on form here as Jim's last hope of redemption. How he gave Mike, who on paper must have been a pushover, a powerful screen presence is something I'll never know. Harsh Times is hard watching and you won't be skipping out of the cinema full of the joys of life after this.
Review by Gavin Burke
DVD Reviews
Footloose (2011)

Differentiating itself from the recent slew of dance flicks by having an actual plot - all be it a regurgitated one - this remake of the 1984 Kevin Bacon starrer manages to (mostly) compliment the... [more]
One Day

Based on the much loved novel by David Nicholls (who adapts his own book), An Education director Lone Scherfig is in charge of this innately complex tale of the development of a relationship over the... [more]
Midnight in Paris

Woody Allen goes whimsical, while Owen Wilson gives his best performance in years (granted, that's a low bar) in this slight but amusing romantic comedy which features a barrage of classic cultural... [more]
Crazy Stupid Love

You wait all year for a Ryan Gosling film to come out then two come along in the same day. In this hugely enjoyable, if somewhat disjointed, romantic comedy/drama, the talented leading man gets to... [more]
Your Comments