22 BULLETS comes to DVD & BLU-RAY : 31.01.2011

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Genre movies have a their fan bases because fans love to spot the repetition, stylistic tropes and plot devices that set the rules for whatever film niche they enjoy. This isn’t to run genre movies down… When it comes to movies I love a trawl through my favourite cinematic devices. Let’s face it, half the reason why Slasher movies work so well is that you can set your watch to the sleazy point of view camera work, shower scenes and summer camp skinny dipping. Slasher fans aren’t after originality, they want the genre tropes honed into a perfect, efficient fear machine.

The world of organized crime movies has it’s own style pointers and story rules and 22 BULLETS revels in many of them. Some viewers might hanker after a fresh new, hyper-realistic take on the everyday lives of small town hoods. People, let me guide you to Donnie Brasco, the ‘Blue Collar Joe’ of mob flicks. Personally, when I sit down to watch a tale of crime and criminals I want it to be operatically tragic. This is rule number one.

Gangster moves need revenge as a motivator, an older boss who doesn’t like the drug trade but risks his position because of this with younger, rising members of the organization. I need betrayal and conversations about honour among thieves and I want a cop on the trail with a grudging respect for his or her foes.

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I want a execution after a fine meal, so that the victim expires into his soup. I want one guy left alive to deliver a message. I want interrogations where the captive is tied to a chair and has a burlap sack over his head. I want everyone on the side of wrong to uphold the code of Omertà

The gangsters in my film think of their crimes as ‘The Work’ and their wives fool themselves into thinking their husbands are business men. At some point in the movie, will will visit a drug dealer who spends all day on the couch in his underwear and a silk kimono, scratching himself with the barrel of a gun.

At a given point in the movie, we get to the ‘everybody gets wacked’ montage, where various bodies will be shown in ditches and meat lockers while a plaintive song tinkles in the background. This will be especially tragic when we see the decaying body of the guy who was ‘getting out after one last job’.

When it comes time for the bosses reign to come to an end, his most trusted ally and friend since childhood, when they ran wild and loose on the streets together, will be the one who betrays him. When revenge comes, it will be swift and bloody, except for the guy tied to a chair with the burlap sack on his head… For him it’ll be slow and bloody.

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22 Bullets: Interviews

22 BULLETS: Like Leon or Not?

22 BULLETS: Press Release

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Many famous actors have roles they are known for but few performers have a part define their careers (at least in the English speaking world) as much as Jean Reno. For all his sterling work in Nikita, The Big Blue and Ronin, it’s his 1994 hitman classic Leon that people remember, an extraordinary performance in a film that defied the conventions of your typical guns and glory action flick.

The word Leon has been mentioned in comparison to 22 Bullets. Here’s how it’s similar:

  • It’s got Jean Reno in it.
  • There are guns.
  • Jean Reno’s role is the moral centre, even though he’s a flawed character
  • Both are very much European films, even if Leon is set in New York.
  • There’s revenge and things.

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Aside from that, it’s a very different film. 22 Bullets deals with a man at the top of the criminal tree, not a bottom feeder like Leon. In 22 Bullets, Reno plays a man until recently completely in control of his destiny. Leon, by contrast is a man beholden to a corrupt hood who gives him pennies and trinkets in return for risking his life. Leon is illiterate and an illegal immigrant and thus unable to find a way out of his mess, 22 Bullets has a lead character who is a capable leader of men.22 Bullets sees Reno seeking revenge for a life lived then snatched away. Leon never had a life to speak of until he sees a small spark of possibility with Natilie Portman’s character, lets his mask slip and seeks to protect her.

Don’t expect to see a retread of Leon when you buy 22 Bullets, expect a riot of back stabbing, back peddling crooks trying to avoid being sprayed with hot metal vengeance when Reno comes to hunt them down. In Leon, Reno skirted the edges of organized crime, taking out the trash but never being given entrance the club. In 22 Bullets, he is the club until he’s betrayed and all hell breaks loose…

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