Return This Love Letter to Sender

The hissing of the brakes, the squealing of metal wheels on metal tracks — after the first vivid minute or so of “The Taking of Pelham 123� I could almost smell the hot exhalation of the tunnels on the Lexington line.

   Tony Scott’s production design is richly colored and stylish, with a constantly moving and swooping camera, and provides much of the pleasure of this disappointing and thrill-less movie.

   I’ve never seen the 1974 original, so can’t compare the new version, which stars Denzel Washington, portly and graying,  as MTA subway dispatcher Walter Garber, and John Travolta, sharply moustachioed, as the subway hijacker Ryder, who takes 18 passengers hostage in return for a $10 million payoff. 

   Since Scott rigorously observes all the conventions of the genre, it’s never in doubt who will live and who will get gruesomely executed (this movie revels in slow motion spattering of blood).  The parade of stereotypes offers no surprises, nor does the depressing fact that women have about five lines, total. There aren’t even any memorable passengers on the hijacked trains, just the usual cute kid and heroic ex-military guy.

   Even the acting is subdued. Travolta phones it in, recycling demented cackles and menacing shouts from other villanous roles past.

  And Washington, attempting to talk him down and prevent the shedding of blood until the ransom money arrives, tamps down his natural charisma to play a downtrodden family man who’s called on to become an accidental hero after one last humiliation.

   The supporting players have it better: John Turturro, as Camonetti, an expert hostage negotiator, takes an underwritten part and adds some much-needed juice.

   And James Gandolfini, as a craven and cowardly mayor, gets in a few sharp cracks and bits of New York humor before he suddenly figures out what Ryder is really up to. The subway hijacking is a decoy, designed to run up the price of gold on Wall Street.  But that twist, like many others, goes nowhere, slowly. The film’s climax is just a long, tedious car chase, ending up with Garber vs. Ryder on the Manhattan Bridge. Like almost every other scene in the film, this one makes no sense and takes too long to come to its incredibly obvious conclusion.

   For a film whose best trait is its visuals, there’s one additional disappointment. It tries to be a love letter to New York City. In a scene where Garber is flown in a helicopter to meet Ryder face to face, Camonetti gestures to the glittering city below them and says, “you can see what you’re fighting for.â€� But New York never becomes a believable character, here.

Latest News

Housatonic softball beats Webutuck 16-3

Haley Leonard and Khyra McClennon looked on as HVRHS pulled ahead of Webutuck, May 2.

Riley Klein

FALLS VILLAGE — The battle for the border between Housatonic Valley Regional High School and Webutuck High School Thursday, May 2, was won by HVRHS with a score of 16-3.

The New Yorkers played their Connecticut counterparts close early on and commanded the lead in the second inning. Errors plagued the Webutuck Warriors as the game went on, while the HVRHS Mountaineers stayed disciplined and finished strong.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mountaineers fall 3-0 to Wamogo

Anthony Foley caught Chase Ciccarelli in a rundown when HVRHS played Wamogo Wednesday, May 1.

Riley Klein

LITCHFIELD — Housatonic Valley Regional High School varsity baseball dropped a 3-0 decision to Wamogo Regional High School Wednesday, May 1.

The Warriors kept errors to a minimum and held the Mountaineers scoreless through seven innings. HVRHS freshman pitcher Chris Race started the game strong with no hits through the first three innings, but hiccups in the fourth gave Wamogo a lead that could not be caught.

Keep ReadingShow less
The artist called ransome

‘Migration Collage' by ransome

Alexander Wilburn

If you claim a single sobriquet as your artistic moniker, you’re already in a club with some big names, from Zendaya to Beyoncé to the mysterious Banksy. At Geary, the contemporary art gallery in Millerton founded by New Yorkers Jack Geary and Dolly Bross Geary, a new installation and painting exhibition titled “The Bitter and the Sweet” showcases the work of the artist known only as ransome — all lowercase, like the nom de plume of the late Black American social critic bell hooks.

Currently based in Rhinebeck, N.Y., ransome’s work looks farther South and farther back — to The Great Migration, when Jim Crow laws, racial segregation, and the public violence of lynching paved the way for over six million Black Americans to seek haven in northern cities, particularly New York urban areas, like Brooklyn and Baltimore. The Great Migration took place from the turn of the 20th century up through the 1970s, and ransome’s own life is a reflection of the final wave — born in North Carolina, he found a new home in his youth in New Jersey.

Keep ReadingShow less
Four Brothers ready for summer season

Hospitality, ease of living and just plain fun are rolled into one for those who are intrigued by the leisure-time Caravana experience at the family-owned Four Brothers Drive-in in Amenia. John Stefanopoulos, pictured above, highlights fun possibilities offered by Hotel Caravana.

Leila Hawken

The month-long process of unwrapping and preparing the various features at the Four Brothers Drive-In is nearing completion, and the imaginative recreational destination will be ready to open for the season on Friday, May 10.

The drive-in theater is already open, as is the Snack Shack, and the rest of the recreational features are activating one by one, soon to be offering maximum fun for the whole family.

Keep ReadingShow less