Monday 1 May 2023

Felon review

 Number 780 on the top 1000 films of all time is the 2008 prison drama 'Felon.'

Wade Porter (Stephen Dorff) is a family man who accidentally kills a burglar fleeing from his house. He is sent to prison for involuntary manslaughter. Once there, he befriends fellow inmate, enigmatic loner, John Smith (Val Kilmer,) and he is subjected to the brutal regime of corrupt head prison guard Lieutenant Jackson (Harold Perrineau.)

Coming out in 2008, Felon is relatively late to the prison drama scene. In 1994, we had the magnificent Shawshank Redemption. A few years later, HBO released the TV series 'Oz,' which also starred Harold Perrineau, but as a prisoner. You could argue that Felon added nothing new to the genre. We've seen these characters and tropes before, but it was still a damn entertaining film.

Wade is an instantly likeable protagonist. He did what any man would have done in his situation - protect his family. Unfortunately for him, it wasn't in self-defence, hence why he had to be imprisoned. We empathise with his struggles to survive. For Jackson's own twisted enjoyment, he makes the inmates fight during their yard time. It is a stark depiction of prison life and that's without all the rape you see on Oz.

As can often be the case with male-led narratives, there is the tendency to only focus on the male story - if he does have a wife or a girlfriend, her only role is to support his story. However, what director Ric Roman Waugh did so well was focus on the struggles of Wade's wife Laura. With him in jail, she is fighting to pay the bills as well as take care of their young son. All credit to actress Marisol Nichols for bringing Laura to life. We really felt her anguish.

Although he was cartoonish at times, Harold Perrineau was very good as well. Lieutenant Jackson has been a prison guard for fifteen years. Five years ago, a prisoner threw cocktail of human bodily fluids into his face. He subsequently caught Hep A, which he passed onto his wife and child. He is only too representative of the thousands of prison guards whose initial optimism has been replaced by a world-worn cynicism. One such officer is raw recruit James Collins (Nate Parker) who is initially eager to serve, but is quickly ground down by Jackson's authoritarian regime. Collins provided a great antithesis to his superior officer.

Val Kilmer was also very good even if his character was over-the-top. I understand you do get these philosopher-cum-psychopaths who justify everything they do with a profound thought, because they think they're such independent free-thinkers. But after a while, his constant philosophising became a little tiresome.

I did enjoy Felon though. It didn't add anything to the prison-drama genre, but it was a damn good prison-drama film.

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