Executed with considerable
polish and filled with familiar faces, Love
and Bullets feels suspiciously like a real movie. After all, it’s
ostensibly a crime thriller, and it stars Charles Bronson, who enjoyed more
than a few successes in the realm of violent cinema. Yet the story has one of
the most anemic second acts in screenwriting history, and the characters are
preposterously undercooked. Adding to the list of shortcomings is a typically
amateurish performance by leading lady Jill Ireland, Bronson’s real-life wife
and his onscreen foil is far too many pictures. Having said all that, Love and Bullets has a few enjoyable passages
of action and/or suspense, so even if the movie is the filmic equivalent of
empty calories, at least some of the scenes have flavor.
Bronson plays Charlie
Congers, a detective based in Phoenix, Arizona. Federal agents show up one day
and ask Charlie to travel to Europe, where onetime mob girlfriend Jackie Pruitt
(Ireland) is in hiding. The Feds believe Jackie has incriminating information
on big-time gangster Joe Bomposa (Rod Steiger), her former lover, but the Feds
offer convoluted reasons why they can’t cross international borders in order to
collect Jackie. Charlie accepts the assignment, and before long he and Jackie
are on the run from Joe’s hit men, who want to prevent Jackie from testifying.
Naturally, the fugitives fall in love. The unusual wrinkle, which should have
energized the story but never ends up adding much of anything, is that Jackie
doesn’t actually have any useful knowledge about Joe’s criminal activities.
Therefore, all the danger that arises from Charlie’s mission is pointless,
which has the effect of making the movie feel pointless, as well.
Despite the
inconsequential story, the sleek surfaces of Love and Bullets offer minor pleasures—as is true for most of the
movies directed by reliable journeyman Stuart Rosenberg, best known for a
series of Paul Newman collaborations including Cool Hand Luke (1967). During one imaginative sequence, for
instance, Charlie makes a blowgun out of found objects and then uses the weapon
to dispatch several would-be assassins. Additionally, the tightly wound score
by Lalo Schifrin evokes the menace of Jerry Goldsmith’s music and a bit of the
whimsy of Ennio Morricone’s, so the movie has a lively soundtrack. Colorful
players including Val Avery, Bradford Dillman, Michael V. Gazzo, Paul Koslo,
Strother Martin, and Henry Silva attack their supporting roles vigorously,
compensating mightily for Ireland’s tone-deaf acting. Bronson is just Bronson,
familiar but formidable. And then there’s Steiger, shouting and strutting
through one of his signature overwrought performances. Rarely has so much
effort been exhausted to portray a character of so little importance.
Love and Bullets: FUNKY
1 comment:
As a little bonus for fans of "Quincy, M.E.," the coroner is played by Joseph Roman (and unlike the usual state of his character there, he actually gets to speak!).
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