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Freedomland

Score: 78%
Rating: R
Publisher: Sony Pictures Home
                  Entertainment

Region: 1
Media: DVD/1
Running Time: 113 Minutes
Genre: Drama/Crime/Thriller
Audio: English (Dolby Digital 5.1), DTS
           Surrond Sound


Features:

  • Available Subtitles: English, French
  • Available Audio Tracks: English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Viewable in both anamorphic widescreen format (2.40:1) and full screen (1.33:1)

Freedomland takes place in Dempsey, a predominantly black neighborhood in New Jersey. After a white woman named Brenda Martin (Julianne Moore) shows up bloodied and bruised in a hospital, detective Lorenzo Council (Samuel L. Jackson) is sent to investigate her claims that she was carjacked by a black man. As Lorenzo questions her, she soon reveals that her four year-old son was asleep in the backseat of the car when she was carjacked, prompting the local police department to immediately swarm Dempsey and lock it down until the suspect is caught and Brenda’s kid is found. The sudden police action stirs up resentment from the black community. The deeper Lorenzo probes into Brenda’s story, the more questions he has and the more Brenda’s story begins to fall apart. Things are further complicated when a missing child activist, Karen Collucci (Edie Falco), and Brenda’s racist cop brother, Danny (Ron Ellard), also become involved in the case.

Freedomland’s biggest issue is that its focus lies more on trying to make a comment on the state of race relations rather than telling a good story. In other words, the movie is trying to be Crash, only without the memorable characters or story. Though the plot has an interesting premise, the story never takes off or gets the viewer involved. There isn’t much mystery and the racial tension is typical of movies dealing with the subject matter. On top of that, events aren’t all that well connected and feel like small mini-stories loosely connected into one larger picture. The problem here lies mainly in the editing, which absolutely kills most of the movie’s bigger plot points.

While Freedomland boasts an impressive starring cast, none of the performances are all that memorable. Jackson and Moore turn in the more disappointing performances (though neither feels phoned in, just not up to their potential), while Falco does a great job and has perhaps one of the more powerful scenes in the movie. Moore’s performance is hampered by her role, which gets a little too emotional sometimes. After her fifth teary-eyed soliloquy you’ll want to slap her silly and say,”Just get over it!”

Ultimately, Freedomland is a great premise that never really goes anywhere. The film simply tries too hard at making relevant, hard-hitting commentary that it forgets what makes an enjoyable movie.



-Starscream, GameVortex Communications
AKA Ricky Tucker

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