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2020年05月19日
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カテゴリ:カテゴリ未分類

Country - USA

Drama
Rating - 50047 votes
writers - Robert B. Parker, Ace Atkins
Release Year - 2020


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Spenser confidential torrent download.
Download Torrent Spenser confidential.
They rebooted Spenser! I was pretty hyped when I saw this as I fondly recall the TV show from my childhood. I thought the movie was good. I liked the characters and I felt the plotline was solid (if predictable. Overall it was pretty engaging and I'm kind of hoping more come out. And while I can buy Markie Mark (love me some Markie Mark! as Brooks will ALWAYS be Hawk for me.
Download torrent spenser confidentiality.


Anyone who's read the Robert B. Parker novels about the lovably honorable private investigator, Spenser (with an "s. will likely suffer irreversible dismay within the first few seconds of "Spenser Confidential, Netflix's shameless misappropriation of the private eye's namesake. That's because the latter bears no resemblance to the former.

First off, Parker's Spenser (with an "s, in case you've forgotten) a former California state trooper turned private investigator, never went to prison. He also never wandered the streets of Boston without any means of gainful employment, which Wahlberg's character seems to have no trouble in doing. Moreover, Spenser in Netflix world is a crass, knuckle-dragging buffoon, in stark contrast to the Spenser in Parker world, who is cerebral, mild-mannered, honorable. The decision to diverge so completely and unequivocally from the seminal character is both baffling and exasperating. But in all fairness, it is a movie, and unless you're willing to overlook such trivialities, you'll likely never fully appreciate the rest of the film's abject absurdity.

The story opens with Wahlberg recounting in his customary leaden monotone the events that have resulted in his five-year incarceration-a spontaneous beat down of his former boss, Captain Boylan (Michael Gaston) an abusive, corrupt cop who has finally gotten on our antihero's last evanescent nerve. We then cut to a bespectacled Spenser, clearly wiser for his suffering, sitting in prison, surrounded by fellow ne'er-do-wells whose intentions are as hard to read as the permanent scowls on their faces. A predictable confrontation erupts-because, as we all know, no one likes cops, even bad ones, in prison-leaving Spenser, bloodied and sporting a shank in the kidney, none the worse for the wear (must be the sun salutations he's been doing in his cell each morning.

Upon his release, he's harried by cops who clearly have difficulty scaling the Big Blue Wall, and decides his best option is to leave Boston altogether and move to Arizona, where his plans include driving a big rig and contemplating sunsets. But before that can happen-insert totally unexpected plot complication-Spenser becomes embroiled in the sudden murders of his old boss and a young officer working in some vague capacity as an informant for the FBI. The plot thickens like molasses.

Having recently been released from prison for assaulting his superior and subsequently threatened by the entire Boston police department, Spenser naturally decides to put his ambitions to become a truck driver on hold and remain in the city where virtually everyone hates his guts. He recruits his

former boxing coach, Henry, played by veteran actor Alan Arkin, along with an up-and-coming fighter named Hawk, portrayed with suitable reserve by relative newcomer Winston Duke as a character whose reluctance to get involved in a serious police matter represents the sole instance of common sense in the entire film (spoiler: it doesn't last. On the periphery, though never out of view, is ex-girlfriend Cissy (played with exuberant abandon by IIiza Schlesinger) an acerbic-tongued bombshell whose life as the long-suffering girl of a guy who can't control his temper has been derailed. Exactly what that life is is anyone's guess, though it appears to involve lots of dogs.

Her anger at Spenser is manifest, evinced by an incessant string of insults and a quick romp in the men's room. Perhaps the writers (Sean O'Keefe and Brian Helgeland) are trying to tell us something profound here about the nature of forgiveness, or horniness, or some such nonsense, or, more likely, simply straddling us with yet another limpid scene in the time-honored tradition of Hollywood gratuitous. Either way, it's hardly enough to rescue this disaster of a film from its own folly.

What ensues is a farcical dramedy in the tradition of such memorable gems as "Bad Boys. Starsky and Hutch. Tango and Cash, and "The Other Guys, another Wahlberg buddy film. The movie's premise, and, we must assume, its raison d'etre, rests on a highly convoluted, plodding plot involving drug traffickers, mobsters, and of course dirty cops, all looking to get their honest share of the profits from a new casino set to be installed at an old, abandoned dog track known as Wonderland (the title of the Spenser novel by Ace Atkins. The obvious culpability of Spenser's former partner, Driscoll (played by Bokeem Woodbine) is one of the film's more subtle attributes, though one can hardly fault screenwriters O'Keefe (Lair, Pursuit Force) and Helgeland (Man on Fire, 42, L.A. Confidential) for including a stereotypical villain in an otherwise stereotypical film. As for Wahlberg, whose acting chops are on prominent display in such worthy films as "The Fighter. Invincible, and "Boogie Nights, his rote performance here is what we have come to expect from a seemingly overweening infatuation with silly, mindless entertainment: emotionless dialogue, shirtless posturing, and clumsily executed stunts. One wonders if this reflects Wahlberg's own aesthetic tastes or a dismal lack of quality scripts. Perhaps both.

Despite an experienced and capable ensemble of cast and crew, Spenser Confidential" ultimately fails as even a marginally entertaining brand of pure escapism. It does, however, remind us of a nearly universal truth: books are typically better than the movies they inspire, however obliquely. As a book lover myself, might I suggest you skip this hackneyed tale and visit your local library instead and check out a few of Robert Parker's novels. They're well worth the trip and, if nothing else, will spare you 111 minutes of wondering why you're still watching a movie as pointless as this one.




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最終更新日  2020年05月19日 10時23分55秒
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