Liam Neeson saved me from the pandemic
While living in uncertain times we yearn for heroes on the big screen and small screens. In the past, actors such as Errol Flynn, Sean Connery, Jean Paul Belmondo, Charles Bronson, and Arnold Schwarzenegger have embodied the dependable men of action who audiences trust for their evening of vicarious thrills. Starting with his surprise hit Taken in 2008, Liam Neeson has emerged as this generation’s Clint Eastwood – a taciturn and impressive physical threat to criminal corruption wherever it festers. Even a worldwide pandemic has not deterred Neeson from his mission to entertain. Since October of 2020, he has had an impressive 5 pictures in release as of April 29, 2022. Here is a viewing guide to the man who saved me from the pandemic.
Honest Thief (2020)
A
good start to Neeson’s cycle of Covid era films. Producer-writer-director Mark
Williams (creator of the tv series Ozark) has fashioned a compelling
moral tale about a successful non-violent bank robber who wishes to repay the stolen
money and face the legal consequences so he can marry the woman he loves. Naturally,
a ruthless pair of crooked cops get in the way of his plans, but Liam proves
equally deadly when pushed to defend himself. A small-scale thriller that
effectively balances its hard-boiled elements with the somewhat melodramatic
set up.
The Marksman (2021)
Neeson
has often flirted with Clint Eastwood style characters in the past, but this
script feels like it was originally intended for Dirty Harry himself, not least
because it is written and directed by longtime Eastwood associate Robert Lorenz
(The Trouble with the Curve). Mark Williams also produced this story of an
aging former US Marine Corps sniper who patrols the US-Mexican border reporting
on illegal immigrants to US Border Patrol where his step-daughter works. When
he kills a member of a drug cartel while protecting an orphaned Mexican boy he
is saddled with the uneasy task of dodging vengeful criminals as he drives the
boy to his only family in Chicago. Neeson is very believable as a lonely
widower - and dead shot- with a gruff demeanor yet kind heart that the audience
knows will win the boy’s trust. Coincidently, Clint Eastwood would direct and
star in a very similar film Cry Macho, released only 8 months later.
The Ice Road (2021)
The
most ambitious of Neeson’s recent action films and a frigid bookend to his
Scandi-noir remake Cold Pursuit (2019). Here Liam is part of a team of ice
truckers racing over a frozen lake to rescue trapped miners. A perfect example
of old fashioned high octane filmmaking, using minimal CGI and shot by Clint
Eastwood’s longtime cinematographer Tom Stern on authentically remote Lake Winnipeg
locations. Writer-director Jonathan Hensleigh (Armageddon, The
Punisher) knows which classic films to steal from (The Wages of Fear,
Sorceror), while proving that charismatic middle-aged actors like Neeson
and Laurence Fishburne can still sell the visceral suspense and emotional
extremes of the premise. Buckle up for the best truck thriller since Breakdown
(1997).
Blacklight (2022)
Liam
Neeson’s first movie shot during the pandemic casts him as an FBI agent who uncovers
a conspiracy while on the verge of retirement. A low concept but serviceable
potboiler successfully reuniting Neeson with filmmaker Mark Williams and his Michael
Collins (1996) co-star Aidian Quinn. Truly a test of Neeson’s watchability
even in B-movie material, with enough action and intrigue to provide a slow
night’s entertainment.
Memory (2022)
It was perhaps inevitable that Neeson would
eventually work with action director Martin Campbell (Casino Royale, the
Mask of Zorro), and hopefully this upcoming thriller will fulfill the
promise of their anticipated collaboration. A remake of the Belgian film The
Memory of a Killer (2003) that tells the story of a freelance assassin
targeted by his client when he refuses to complete his assignment. The hook is that
the Neeson’s hitman character suffers from Alzheimer’s, so he can’t even trust
his own memory as he fights to stay one step ahead of his enemies. I will be
looking forward to this as my first Liam Neeson film at the cinema in over 2
years and even though he turns 70 in June, this is will hopefully not be the last
of his beloved action heroes.