Product Description
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PARKER a slick, fast-paced, action-packed crime thriller
starring Jason Statham (The Expendables 2, Safe), Jennifer Lopez
(The Back-up Plan, Out of ) and Nick Nolte (Gangster Squad),
is directed by the O®-winning filmmaker Taylor Hackford (Ray)
and based on the best-selling Parker novel Flash Fire by Richard
Stark. Parker (Statham), is a hardened professional criminal who
will do whatever it takes to get what he wants, living by his own
code of ethics - don t steal from people who can t afford it and
don t hurt people who don t deserve it. But when he s
double-crossed by his crew and left for dead, it s time for
payback. Assuming a disguise and forming an unlikely alliance
with a sexy local Palm Beach resident (Lopez), he tracks down the
gang, ing to take everyone out and hijack the score of their
latest heist.
.co.uk Review
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The great crime novelist Donald E. Westlake was so prolific that
he required several pen names to attach to books that covered all
the writing styles at his command. Much loved by many was Richard
Stark, Westlake's moniker for the author who wrote about a
deliciously enigmatic professional thief named Parker. Parker has
shown up in several movie adaptations, but Parker is the first to
identify him with that name. Even though hulking bulldog Jason
Statham plays him with the brute force and inelegant craft that
has made the actor such a predictable action hero, Parker neatly
captures the essence of the man that Westlake/Stark painted on
the page. Parker is ostensibly based on the Parker novel
Flashfire, though its plot is essentially the same kind of
revenge tale all the other Parker character movies have been.
After a well-planned heist (a terrific sequence staged at the
Ohio State Fair), Parker's cohorts double-cross him and leave him
for dead. But he recovers like the superhuman criminal hero he is
and goes on a laser-focused quest to get back his share of the
score--nothing more, nothing less. If it so happens that he kills
a bunch of worse bad guys and ends up with far more than was owed
him along the way, well, Parker won't complain. Veteran director
Taylor Hackford more than carries the weight for both Parker and
Statham, crafting set pieces and entertaining crime fantasies
right up to the inevitable happy ending for our felonious yet
principled protagonist. Parker makes his way from Ohio to New
Orleans to Palm Beach, among other places, in tracking down the
gang that jacked him. Each setting has a distinct sense of place,
and we root for Parker in exactly the right way to show that bad
guys can often be good even when they're doing terrible things.
The Palm Beach third act is first rate, not least because of
Jennifer Lopez, who plays a lonely real-estate agent who
hessly teams with Parker for some less than predictable
shenanigans. Lopez seems to be hoping for the same kind of impact
she made in Steven Soderbergh's terrific Elmore Leonard
adaptation Out of way back in 1998. Though Parker is not
nearly as great a movie, Lopez truly shines. The same goes for an
interesting and committed supporting cast that includes Michael
Chiklis, Wendell Pierce, Patti LuPone, Bobby Cannavale, and a
thoroughly ravaged-looking Nick Nolte. Lots of movies have made
heroes out of criminals--yay! the bad guy wins!--and Parker makes
a fine entry to the world of violent, fun fantasies in which
crooks come out on top. Statham's line featured in the Parker
trailer pretty much describes his ethos as well as the movie's
slick take on crime-does-pay: "I don't steal from people who
can't afford it, and I don't hurt people who don't deserve it."
Would that all Hollywood action movies could carry the same
credo. --Ted Fry