Cold Pursuit, 2019
Nels (Liam Neeson) is a snowplow driver in a small ski resort town whose adult son is inexplicably killed under suspicious circumstances. While Nels' wife (Laura Dern) grieves, Nels sets out to find his son's killers. His actions set off a chain of events involving a powerful drug dealer called Viking (Tom Bateman) and the head of a rival drug dealing outfit, White Bull (Tom Jackson).
Someone has messed with Liam Neeson's child, and he's coming after them with a particular set of sk---wait, no sorry. And he's coming after them with a snowplow!
This film takes the very popular "someone messes with an older man's family" thriller genre and shifts it laterally into dark comedy crime territory, with what I found to be mixed success.
On the positive side, the film is packed with acting talent, from Neeson and Dern to Jackson (
Shining Time Station flashbacks anyone?), to a brief role by enjoyable weirdo Michael Eklund as one of Viking's thugs. I'd also like to give a big shout out to Nicholas Holmes, playing the Viking's son, Ryan. It's hard to be a kid in a big Hollywood movie and not be totally irritating, much less this type of film in which most of the dialogue is saturated in irony and odd timing. So kudos to Holmes for making his character likable.
I would also compliment the writing in terms of the plot itself. There are a ton of characters floating around, and it was pretty easy to keep track of who was who and also to layer in various character dynamics and subplots. One subplot that I appreciated---to a degree--was the paternal relationship between Ryan and his father's second in command, Mustang (Domenick Lombardozzi), who feeds him Fruity Pebbles behind his father's back.
Where I struggled a little with this film was in the sheer volume and nature of the comedy. It throws everything at the screen, and I mean
everything, and sometimes I wish it had taken a less-is-more approach. Sometimes the humor is either repetitive (such as two different jokes about mourning parents watching their children's bodies being moved by comically slow machinery) or a bit too predictable (in one scene a boy asks Nels to read him "anything" and I thought
What, is he going to read him a snowplow manual? and sure enough, yes, that was the joke.). There was also a bit of a disconnect where the first ten minutes really focus on Nels' grief, but then no one (including Nels!) even mentions his son's name for almost the rest of the film.
I only just realized while looking up IMDb information for this film why the plot sounded vaguely familiar, yet the title was not: it is a remake of a Stellan Skarsgard vehicle called
In Order of Disappearance that I almost watched a bunch of times. Not only is it a remake, it was made by the same director who filmed the original! I wonder how the two films compare.
In any event, I enjoyed this film, but felt that it was a little uneven and a little over-long.