Alpha Dog Review
By Chris Barsanti
The pugilistic script is based on one of those fascinatingly ugly crime stories that come rocketing out of Southern California every now and again, to much clucking of tongues over wayward and rudderless youth. Following the sad state of events that leads a drug dealer to kidnap the younger brother of a client who owes him money, as a means of extracting said payment, the film traces how the kidnapped teenager (a momma's boy who yearns for rebellion) develops a horribly overwrought case of Stockholm Syndrome, earnestly believing he's just having a good time with the dealer's hard-partying friends. In fact, while the kids party like it's 1999 (the year the kidnapping actually took place), imbibing copious amounts of drugs and alcohol, the dealer, Johnny (Emile Hirsch, like an evil version of Turtle from Entourage) is panicking, having realized what he's gotten himself into.
Cassavetes tries extremely hard to give Alpha Dog an aura of credibility, which it rarely comes close to attaining -- even if lawyers for the ongoing litigation that resulted from this real-life case prompted lawyers to try and block the film's screening at last year's Sundance. From the moment the kidnapping takes place, documentary-like freeze frames happen every now and again to identify people in the background as witnesses. This would be easier to buy if the film were taken straight from the case files that Cassavetes was given access to, which it obviously isn't (much of the drama is imagined, and at least a few of the main characters' names have been changed).
The bulk of Alpha Dog indulges in grade-C SoCal exploitation -- endless pot-soaked parties with trash-talking white wannabe gangsters and their nubile molls -- that, given how many real people are represented here, quickly crosses the line into recklessness. It's beside the point, as in a scene where the kidnapped kid, Zack Mazursky (Anton Yelchin), loses his virginity to a pair of blondes in a swimming pool; Cassavetes had well established Zack's reasons for not escaping when he could without needing to venture into an R-rated version of The O.C., which the film resembles on more than one occasion.
The truest moments that register in Alpha Dog involve Zack's relationship with Johnny's buddy Frankie, played with surprising assuredness by Justin Timberlake as someone who thinks he's a better guy than he is: playing cool big brother when he should be telling Zack to escape. The potency of this friendship, however, bears little relation to the rest of the film, where caricatures like Sharon Stone (playing Zack's mom as a shrieking harridan) and an energetic but poorly directed Ben Foster (as Zack's speed-freak older brother) go bouncing off the walls to often laughable effect. Rebel Without A Cause it ain't.
You're gonna mow this entire lawn, bub.
Facts and Figures
Year: 2007
Run time: 122 mins
In Theaters: Friday 12th January 2007
Box Office USA: $15.1M
Box Office Worldwide: $15.3M
Distributed by: Universal Studios
Production compaines: A-Mark Entertainment
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 2 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 55%
Fresh: 78 Rotten: 65
IMDB: 6.9 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Producer: Steven Markoff, Robert Geringer, Avram Kaplan
Screenwriter: Nick Cassavetes
Starring: Bruce Willis as Sonny Truelove, Matthew Barry as Interviewer (as Matt Barry), Emile Hirsch as Johnny Truelove, Fernando Vargas as Tiko 'TKO' Martinez, Vincent Kartheiser as Pick Giaimo, Justin Timberlake as Frankie Ballenbacher, Shawn Hatosy as Elvis Schmidt, Alex Solowitz as Bobby '911', Alec Vigil as P.J. Truelove, Harry Dean Stanton as Cosmo Gadabeeti, Frank Cassavetes as Adrian Jones, Nicole Dubos as Neighborhood Girl on Couch, Regina Rice as Dance Bitch Girl, Laura Nativo as Party Girl, Ben Foster as Jake Mazursky, Amber Heard as Alma, Anton Yelchin as Zack Mazursky, David Thornton as Butch Mazursky, Sharon Stone as Olivia Mazursky, Olivia Wilde as Angela Holden, Heather Wahlquist as Wanda Haynes, Amanda Seyfried as Julie Beckley, Shera Danese as Abby
Also starring: Avram Kaplan, Nick Cassavetes