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Film Features Film/TV

The Equalizer

I have a theory about The Equalizer.

If you’ve ever been unfortunate enough to be cornered by me at a cocktail party, you know I am a man of many theories. But this theory is about why, in 2014, Hollywood would sink $50 million into an adaptation of a third-rate TV show from the 1980s about Bob McCall, an ex-CIA agent who goes all Dirty Harry on New York City as a way to atone for his past sins committed in the service of The Company.

What’s that, you say? You didn’t know this Denzel Washington vehicle was a TV reboot? Isn’t the whole idea of rebooting popular entertainment franchises from the past to capitalize on the brand recognition built up over the years, so as to save marketing money and cut through the audience’s mental clutter in today’s go-go internet world? So why bother rebooting a boring TV show no one remembers as a generic action thriller? Vigilante violence movies are a dime a dozen. Just pick a new title, give Washington a gun, and let the bad-guy blood flow.

Chloë Grace Moretz and Denzel Washington in The Equalizer.

That’s where the theory comes in.

The Equalizer movie exists because the real audience for this kind of project is not the audience, as in the public. It’s a pitch designed to attract studio investment by appealing to the decision makers, who, at this point in time are rich white guys in their 40s and older. To that very small but very powerful audience, The Equalizer is gold. They’re the ones who fondly remember the series, which starred Edward Woodward, an English actor who was 55 when the show premiered in 1985. My theoretical execs were teenagers back then, and things were so much simpler: the Russians were the bad guys, women knew their place, and an old man with a full head of white hair named Ronald Reagan took care of everything. But today’s audiences, whom the execs must court, are so confusing and scary. “So, yeah,” they say. “Let’s make that Equalizer movie! Everybody loves The Equalizer!”

Seen through the lens of this theory, so many inexplicable Hollywood phenomena, such as the fiasco of the Battleship movie, make more sense. It certainly explains The Equalizer, which was supposed to star noted aging Australian actor Russell Crowe, who could at least sound like Woodward, but ended up starring a tired looking Washington rocking dad jeans like it was his job.

The movie opens with McCall working in a Home Mart, presumably because the Home Depot product placement deal fell through at the last minute. He’s a stand-up guy whom everyone likes, but he is sad, because he is a widower with a dark past. So on nights when he can’t sleep, he frequents a coffee shop where he befriends trashily dressed Russian prostitute Teri (Chloë Grace Moretz). But when he sees Teri get a life-threatening beat down at the hands of her pimp, he decides to get involved and use his CIA superpowers, which manifest themselves onscreen as CSI montages of Washington’s bored eyes looking at stuff, to help her out. But just helping a much younger woman dress more modestly while proving the superior virility of older men isn’t enough to build a movie around, so it turns out that the guys pimping this particular street hooker are big time Russian gangsters who call in the anti-Equalizer in the form of Marton Csokas, an ex-Spetznaz agent who calls himself Teddy. Hijinx, in the form of comfort violence for the go-to-bed-early set, ensue.

Teri, the woman who all of this trouble is supposedly for, completely disappears from the movie for an hour until returning, more modestly dressed, after the climactic set piece inside the Home Mart where McCall gets to do all of those ultra violent things with tools you fantasize about while you’re in Home Depot. Or at least, I fantasize about them, which just goes to show that, as a guy who grew up in the ’80s, I am in the target audience for this film. I only wish, like my theoretical Hollywood execs, I had the means to stop it from happening.

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Film Features Film/TV

If I Stay

If I Stay is a movie that asks whether an acceptance letter from a prestigious college can resurrect the dead. It’s also a genteel teenage melodrama whose plates are galvanized from time to time by arresting, unexpectedly acute lines of dialogue or self-sacrificial acts.

Chloë Grace Moretz plays Mia, a well-spoken, well-adjusted teenager whose life is in flux: She seems happy, but she may have issues. However, before she — or the audience — can figure out exactly what those issues are, Mia, her parents (Mireille Enos and Joshua Leonard) and her little brother (Jakob Davies) get into a serious car accident. Mia ends up in a coma, but her mind remains restless and active. The rest of the film follows Mia’s disembodied spirit as it wanders barefoot around the same hospital where determined medical professionals work to save her and her family’s lives. As she sees scenes from her life flash before her, she is faced with a simple choice: Does she return to her body and live out her life or go into the light and leave our world? And if she does remain on earth, which direction will her life take?

Like other YA novels-turned-movies like The Fault in Our Stars and The Hunger Games series, If I Stay‘s protagonist is a smart girl. Moretz is comfortable in this role; she played a cute, damaged smart girl in last year’s underrated Carrie remake, and she played a cute, psychotic one in the Kick-Ass movies. She’s a teen titan who shape-shifts like Ant-Man or Giant-Man. She’s tiny and soft-voiced enough to disappear into the crowd or the shadows, but her heart-shaped face and elfin friskiness propel her into the center of a scene whenever she chooses.

Chloë Moretz is trapped between worlds in If I Stay.

At my other job, I see and work with smart girls like Mia all day long. It’s funny; to many of their peers, these girls’ intelligence, beauty, and sensitivity are intimidating and scary because they get their teenage kicks from unusual places. In a series of flashbacks, we see that, for Mia, it’s the cello: she resists her parents’ love of rock-and-roll and pursues classical music instead. Practicing Beethoven may limit her circle of friends, but she soon catches the eye of handsome, chivalrous rocker Adam (Jamie Blackley).

Prefabricated conflicts aside, Adam is a harmless, boring drip, just like Mia’s insufferably tolerant and cool ex-punk-rock parents, who are always one straggler’s dinner party away from their own Portlandia sketch. Yet in spite of this ballast, If I Stay floats above a tar pit of sentimentality for three-fourths of its run time, and when the sentimental goop finally bubbles up onscreen, it’s not so bad.

This kind of shrugging praise probably makes If I Stay sound pretty run of the mill. It is, for the most part. But this kind of teenage tearjerker touches on more of the human experience in any given scene than most current blockbusters do in their entire run time. Few people can remember the first time they killed a man or saved the galaxy from Ronan the Accuser, but plenty of people can remember their first crush. When Mia sits down cross-legged on her bed and talks to Adam, who’s climbed up the side of the house to see her, the scene evokes the thrilling fear of letting someone else into your life for the first time. Scenes like these are rousing accidents in movies like this, which are as glossy and visually exciting as the average USA Network family drama.