Contraband (2012)
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49% of critics liked it
(120 reviews) -
62% of users liked it
(28,939 ratings)
Chris Farraday (Mark Wahlberg) long ago abandoned his life of crime, but after his brother-in-law, Andy (Caleb Landry Jones), botches a drug deal for his ruthless boss, Tim Briggs (Giovanni Ribisi), Chris is forced back into doing what he does best- running contraband-to settle Andy's debt. Chris is… More Chris Farraday (Mark Wahlberg) long ago abandoned his life of crime, but after his brother-in-law, Andy (Caleb Landry Jones), botches a drug deal for his ruthless boss, Tim Briggs (Giovanni Ribisi), Chris is forced back into doing what he does best- running contraband-to settle Andy's debt. Chris is a legendary smuggler and quickly assembles a crew with the help of his best friend, Sebastian (Ben Foster), for one final run to Panama and back, hoping to return with millions in counterfeit bills. Things quickly fall apart and with only hours to reach the cash, Chris must use his rusty skills to successfully navigate a treacherous criminal network of brutal drug lords, cops and hit men before his wife, Kate (Kate Beckinsale), and sons become their target. -- (C) Official Site
- Rating, Runtime
- R, 1 hr. 49 min.
- Directed By
- Baltasar Kormákur
- Written By
- Óskar Jónasson, Arnaldur Indriđason, Aaron Guzikowski
- Genres
- Mystery & Suspense, Action & Adventure
- In Theaters
- Jan 13, 2012 Wide
- On DVD
- May 21, 2012
- Studio
- Universal Pictures
Critic Reviews
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David Denby, New Yorker
A winter-season product, but perfectly absorbing once it gets going.
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Roger Moore, Dallas Morning News
Mark Wahlberg delivers the goods in "Contraband," a B-movie about smuggling in boozy, corrupt New Orleans.
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Glenn Kenny, MSN Movies
It's a good, chugging caper movie for the most part.
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Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
Wahlberg could sleepwalk through this role, and does. See this movie and you'll surely follow his lead.
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Tom Long, Detroit News
"Contraband" comes off the factory floor with its engine running and ready to drive. But the ride feels overly familiar.
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Stephen Whitty, Newark Star-Ledger
Frankly, Wahlberg has outgrown movies like this. And so have we.
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Andrew L. Urban, Urban Cinefile
Wahlberg and the rest of the excellently chosen cast keep us engaged, even though the screenplay and direction are full of holes and contrivances
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Ed Gibbs, The National
Fond nods to Wahlberg's cinematic past ("It's like the size of a Mini Cooper") are thrown in, and it's imaginatively shot, yet it all feels rather too familiar.
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Jeffrey M. Anderson, Common Sense Media
CONTRABAND's plot (remade from a 2008 Icelandic thriller) is pretty creaky, but Icelandic director Baltasar Kormakur's execution is scrappy and energetic.
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James Kendrick, Q Network Film Desk
a moderately enjoyable, generally preposterous thriller of minimal ambitions
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Dan Lybarger, KC Active
The only real subterfuge this film has committed has been against paying audiences.
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Charles Koplinski, Illinois Times
Inspired cast and intelligent twists elevate Contraband.
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Robert Denerstein, Movie Habit
Smuggles a few thrills into January
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Daniel M. Kimmel, New England Movies Weekly
Based on a 2010 film from Iceland, something seems to have gotten lost in the translation...
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Todd Jorgenson, Cinemalogue.com
The storyline is driven by too many nick-of-time scenarios, the repetitive nature of which gradually decrease their impact.
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Matt Brunson, Creative Loafing
Its foreign antecedent bore the moniker Reykjavik-Rotterdam, but perhaps mindful that many Americans would mistake these two major European cities for brands of beer, the action has been switched to New Orleans-Panama.
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Jim Lane, Sacramento News & Review
... gritty and tense ...
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Rich Heldenfels, Akron Beacon Journal
Entertainingly gritty until an ending that seems to go against all that has preceded it.
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Tim Brayton, Antagony & Ecstasy
Not designed to win any awards... but frankly, it's more successful at what it's doing and a heck of a lot more watchable than most of what is designed to win awards.
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Peter Keough, Boston Phoenix
This standard heist thriller is a composite of knock-offs, but when Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in America is among the sources ripped off, the quality is pretty high.
Critic ratings and reviews powered by RottenTomatoes.com
Fresh (60% or more critics rated the movie positively)
Rotten (59% or fewer critics rated the movie positively)
Featured Audience Ratings
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Lorenzo v
<i>"What would you hide to protect your family?"</i> To protect his brother-in-law from a drug lord, a former smuggler heads to Panama to score millions of dollars in counterfeit bills. <center><font size=+2 face="Century… More
<i>"What would you hide to protect your family?"</i> To protect his brother-in-law from a drug lord, a former smuggler heads to Panama to score millions of dollars in counterfeit bills. <center><font size=+2 face="Century Schoolbook"><b><u>REVIEW</u></b></font></center> Mark Wahlberg toplines as the sympathetic, blue-collar protagonist, with a wife and two little boys. He is reluctant to pull off one last job to thwart a gang of murderous, low-life thugs from icing his wife's cretinous younger brother. In the Icelandic original "Reykjavik-Rotterdam", the hero was a smuggler, too. He got busted trying to smuggle liquor, got fired, and wound up working as a poorly paid security guard. Financial troubles drove him back into the smuggling racket, and he had to pull off one last job. Of course, a first-class story can always weather the rigors of a remake, and director Baltasar Kormákur has crafted a memorable heist thriller which doesn't rely entirely on macho acrobatics and staccato bursts of gunfire for more than ten minutes out of its 110 minute running time. In fact, Kormákur doesn't linger on any scene any longer than necessary to make his points in this nervy spine-tingler. You won't find a more treacherous horde of villains anywhere than those that Ben Foster, Giovanni Ribisi, and J.K. Simmons portray. Ribisi takes top honors as a particularly repulsive specimen of sub-humanity. The mark of a top-notch thriller is when the hero winds up stuck in one more jam than he had prepared for. "Contraband" keeps Chris leaping through one flaming hoop after another. Director Baltasar Kormákur and scenarist Arnaldur Indriđason paint our hero into one corner after another so that he must use his wits rather than his fists or firearms to extricate himself "Contraband" will keep you poised on the edge of your seat right up to fade-out. -
Douglas W C
Okay movie but it did really intense from the middle to the end. Too much use of the F word, I guess that is poor writing on the part of the writers. -
Nate Z
January at the movies has long been a time for two kinds of releases: 1) award-worthy films expanding into wider release, and, 2) crap. That's about it. I'll let you figure out which category the action thriller Contraband belongs in. Paul (Mark Wahlberg) was once the… More
January at the movies has long been a time for two kinds of releases: 1) award-worthy films expanding into wider release, and, 2) crap. That's about it. I'll let you figure out which category the action thriller Contraband belongs in. Paul (Mark Wahlberg) was once the best smuggler in the business. He's since gone legit, starting a family and his own private security business. His brother-in-law (Caleb Landry Jones) gets into trouble with some bad men. He tosses a load of smuggled drugs to elude Customs ships, but now Briggs (Giovanni Ribisi) wants the value of the drugs or else. Paul knows he has no choice but to put together one last job to save Kate's (Kate Beckinsale) brother. Paul leaves his family in the hands of Sebastian (Ben Foster), a trusted accomplish on many missions. John puts together a team and plans to board a ship headed for Panama City. While there, the team will load large sums of confederate money. The sale of the fake currency should square things between John and Briggs. However, little goes according to plan. Contraband is a lousy heist picture that feels like it's making it up as it goes. First off, the premise of John having to go back into his art of smuggling to settle a debt has been overdone, and the fact that John's idiotic brother-in-law is as fault makes it hard to care that something might happen to the idiot. But why God do they bring this screw-up, the brother-in-law, along with them? He's already proven to be a poor decision maker and a moron, and, surprise surprise, when in Panama the guy gets them into more danger. So irritating is this character, always foolishly making things worse for John, that you wish they had thrown this dolt overboard. This is a movie structured with a small beginning, a small end, and a great big fat middle, and it's that middle that involves our destination to Panama. With heist movies, as well as most thrillers, we don't want things to go according to plan. We want to see organic complications and watch our team of characters adjust. With Contraband, the complications don't feel natural so much as like careening plot elements from other movies. John's quick visit goes out of control, with the team losing their payment money for the confederate loot (guess who's responsible for that? Guess?), and they have to go find a budding crime lord, Gonzalo (Milk's Diego Luna), and then this crime lord just happens to be plotting a heist at THAT EXACT MOMENT and John and his team should come along and then the heist goes bad, as always, and the team ahs to get away, but Gonzalo demands to be taken to a hospital by gunpoint, and then the cargo ship is going to leave port, and, and, and, and, etc. There are so many breakneck plot turns thrown in that it feels like a broken blender spewing half-formed plot residue everywhere. It's the film equivalent of the If You Give a Mouse a Cookie story ("If you give a smuggler a deadline, he'll need a contact. If you give him a contact, he'll need to do the contact a favor. If he does the contact a favor, he'll have to do this one job for him. If he does this one job for him, he'll need a crew. If he needs a crew, he'll need... etc.). Let's take a moment to analyze the peculiar masks Gonzalo and his team choose to utilize. They literally wrap duct tape around their faces. That's got to be the dumbest mask in the history of cinema, and there have been some stinkers. They couldn't afford pantyhose? Anything? They had to use tape? First off, you can't conceal key features, like your eyes and mouth, and lastly, isn't it going to be something of a bitch to rip those things off? The only person who could properly wear a duct tape mask would be someone suffering from alopecia (condition that leaves a person hairless). Otherwise you're sacrificing your eyebrows. Maybe this is just how things are done in Panama. So much of this movie feels like it's on autopilot, just drifting like that cargo ship. At this point, I don't even think Wahlberg is trying to hide his indifference to the material. He's a man with a shady past who went legit and has a family now, but in order to protect that family he is drawn back to his shady past. How many times has this plot device just been used in the last few years? The rest of the characters fill out the crime thriller cheat sheet: young screw-up who serves as plot catalyst, parent in prison to provide cautionary tale, best trusted pal that ultimately proves to be untrustworthy, and the harried, often victimized wife. Poor Beckinsale (Underworld) who gets beaten, threatened with a gun in her face, and victimized to a degree that it feels like exploitation. This woman can never catch a break. She gets few moments in the film where she is free from being terrorized with violence. I have no idea what would attract an actress like Beckinsale to this part other than the allure of a paycheck. Contraband stalls when it comes to thrills, and part of this is because the villains seem so lame. Briggs just comes across as an inept criminal, like somebody's own screw-up brother-in-law that tagged along to play with the big boys. He's routinely beaten and bossed around. It's hard to take his threats seriously, so the movie cuts its losses and just has him threaten Kate some more. It becomes old quick. The only thing that keeps Contraband going is the great distance between Paula and his family, a divide that keeps Paul vulnerable. Too bad that the movie can't think of anything thrilling to do with this scenario and settles, all too frequently, on scaring the wife. Wouldn't the film have been more engrossing if Paul's wife had been kidnapped this whole time? Would that not cause a better sense of urgency than the vague threat that a character we don't care about might get offed for being stupid? From an action standpoint, the thrills rarely materialize, relying on a contingent of blunders and coincidences to provide the thrills. There wasn't a moment where I worried for a character on screen. This may be because I didn't care for a person on screen, thanks to workmanlike characterization, but it's also got to fall on the feet of Icelandic director Baltasar Kormakur (who starred in Wahlberg's role in the original Icleandic version of this flick) and his nascent camerawork. There will be moments where his camera does stutter-step zooms, mimicking the docu-drama camerawork that's been en vogue with action cinema. And then he'll never repeat it. There's a shot of Gonzalo blowing the armored car up and it's filmed in a high-speed, stylized shot to distill the strange beauty of the force, and then this never happens again. It's like Kormakur is sampling all 31 flavors of action movie styles and can't decide on a visual tone. The action is too dependent on arbitrary coincidences for it to be satisfying of thrilling; we're just waiting for the next out-of-nowhere plot turn to move things along. The ending attempts to tie up things nicely but feels asinine and laughable in how John can take out three villains in one well-orchestrated, tidy swoop. Don't even get me started on the impracticalities of John hearing a lone cell phone ringing to be able to trace his wife in an entire construction site. The resolution feels ludicrous and a stroke of dumb luck. Contraband is a convoluted, knuckleheaded thriller that drags because of arbitrary maneuverings, poor characterization, a fat middle section plot-wise, and pedestrian action. The movie feels like it's being made up on the spot. As a result of all this tiresome lateral plotting, Contraband feels like it's going nowhere and spinning into oblivion. I found myself nodding off at various points, my brain bored by all the generic goings-on. The constant victimization of Paul's wife is a rather ugly development for a movie that confuses salty language and furrowed brows for toughness. The movie is devoid of any sense of fun. It just becomes an empty enterprise of actors going through the motions to work of genre pap. Even by the dirt-low standards of January cinematic offerings, Contraband isn't worth a cent of your hard-earned money. Nate's Grade: C- -
KJ P
It may not have the punch that some crime trillers have, but considering that a film like "Contraband," dropped in the middle of a dull time of the year is this good, is a step in the right direction. After Chris's (Wahlberg) wife's (Beckinsale) brother fails in an… More
It may not have the punch that some crime trillers have, but considering that a film like "Contraband," dropped in the middle of a dull time of the year is this good, is a step in the right direction. After Chris's (Wahlberg) wife's (Beckinsale) brother fails in an attempt to smuggle drugs on a ship, Chris is now on a mission to import counterfeit money in order to pay back the money that is know owed to the vicious boss that his wife's brother had been working for. He does this with him of course, to keep him safe and make sure that nothing goes wrong. This film is very stylish and is always one step ahead of the audience. There were a few eye rolling moments where they should have been caught, but that is what happens in ever crime film, what do you expect? The action is awesome, the story is simple with a complex series of events, the acting is superb by the entire secondary cast, and the conclusion will have your heart racing. I did not expect to enjoy this film as much as I did, especially a January release; However, it is great popcorn entertainment and I give it a solid recommendation. "Contraband" is awesome! -
Tyler C
Generic, sometimes complicated and full of "January film" conventions, Contraband is very a bland and dull heist film. -
Aaron N
Chris Farraday: You think you're the only guy with a gun? In the 2000 remake of Gone in 60 Seconds, starring Nicolas Cage, actor Giovanni Ribisi played Cage's younger brother, who was in over his head after losing out on a big heist, while working for an evil gangster.… More
Chris Farraday: You think you're the only guy with a gun? In the 2000 remake of Gone in 60 Seconds, starring Nicolas Cage, actor Giovanni Ribisi played Cage's younger brother, who was in over his head after losing out on a big heist, while working for an evil gangster. His big brother, who retired from the life of crime, is forced to come back to the life of crime in an effort to keep his little brother out of danger. Over a decade later, in Contraband, Ribisi has now grown up into being the evil gangster character, forcing another unfortunate little brother to do his bidding and bringing back the reluctant older brother. This is all to say that both films are clear examples of a fun enough genre film. Contraband has a bit of an edge (and not just ratings-wise) however, as I was quite pleased with how the film came together, utilizing every character and minor plot point in an economical sense. Especially given the early 2012 release date, this is solid escapist fun that doesn't aspire for anything greater. read the whole review at thecodeiszeek.com -
Jeff B
Contrary to any bad vibrations already on his CV, Mark Wahlberg makes a damn good action figure even when he's banded with shlock-tastic material. He certainly proved this with Shooter, a window-licking actioner with a fetish for body counts, chest-thumping machismo, and… More
Contrary to any bad vibrations already on his CV, Mark Wahlberg makes a damn good action figure even when he's banded with shlock-tastic material. He certainly proved this with Shooter, a window-licking actioner with a fetish for body counts, chest-thumping machismo, and over-the-top mustache-twirling baddies. The good news is: Contraband is better. The bad news is: not by a helluva lot. Shot to pieces with lunk-headed dialogue, the script is just too twisty for its own good. If it weren't for the skills and broad shoulders of its star, this counterfeit Bank Job would've gone bankrupt from the word 'low.' In this R-rated actioner, an ex-smuggler (Wahlberg) is forced to sneak a container of counterfeit bills into the U.S. after his brother-in-law (Lucas Haas) runs afoul of some brutal drug lords and makes their family (Beckinsale, et al) the target of a treacherous criminal network (Giovanni Ribisi, Ben Foster). Oh, it starts off somewhat promising, with Wahlberg's retired criminal pulled back for one...last...job. Insomuch as moviegoers have seen set-ups like this before, they haven't seen it framed around a detailed breakdown of the smuggling trade. The story soon gets incredibly busy, however, putting Wahlberg in the crosshairs of everything from freighter crashes to third world shootouts. His chops might not be able to sell through all of the script's cowboy B.S., but he at least makes this flick pass as entertainment. More than John Travolta or Nicolas Cage, he deserves an honorary professorship in the The Expendables 2's school of kicking ass. Bottom line: The Italian snowjob. -
Eddie C
Complicated, not complex, "Contraband" takes itself too seriously. -
Todd S
Mark Wahlberg is certainly no genius, but when it comes to action movies, he's on top of his game. I wish I could say Contraband was an amazing film, but it was your typical, shoot 'em up action thriller, although the plot was better than most. A lot of critics bashed this… More
Mark Wahlberg is certainly no genius, but when it comes to action movies, he's on top of his game. I wish I could say Contraband was an amazing film, but it was your typical, shoot 'em up action thriller, although the plot was better than most. A lot of critics bashed this film because of its predictability, but what do you expect from these types of films? The story, about an ex-smuggler, returning to his old ways to pay off an unexpected debt, was easy to follow and full of cool action sequences. That's really all you can ask for from these films and I rather enjoyed it. If you don't like action movies, don't watch them! If you do like them, Contraband is a pretty good one and few action stars bring to the table the experience that Whalberg has. If you're looking for something that you don't really have to think about, that will hold your attention, and kill a couple of hours, go with Contraband. -
Sol C
The film was a big disappointment. From the trailer it looks good, but the film itself is not. The style of the film, feels like a copy from any Michael Mann film, especially the hand held camera work. The film reminded me of movies like Kiss of Death and Gone In 60 Seconds but those… More
The film was a big disappointment. From the trailer it looks good, but the film itself is not. The style of the film, feels like a copy from any Michael Mann film, especially the hand held camera work. The film reminded me of movies like Kiss of Death and Gone In 60 Seconds but those films were better than this one. The film was also a little predictable. The film needed a major rewrite. I felt that some characters just behaved very stupidly in the film. There is also only one really good scene in the film, which happens at the end. Acting wise, Wahlberg was ok, but he was better in the Italian Job. I was expecting better from Beckinsale, Foster, and Ribisi. Diego Luna was miscast. -
Jeffrey M
Contraband is familiar and has its' fair share of clichĂ (C)s (father-son crime relationship, one last job, etc), but overall it manages to be a solid if not entirely memorable entry into the action/heist genre. The much-maligned Mark Wahlberg was actually pretty decent, as was… More
Contraband is familiar and has its' fair share of clichĂ (C)s (father-son crime relationship, one last job, etc), but overall it manages to be a solid if not entirely memorable entry into the action/heist genre. The much-maligned Mark Wahlberg was actually pretty decent, as was Kate Beckinsale, though she wasn't given much to work with. The script was uneven, with a sloppy last act, but a fairly strong middle, especially examining the inner workings of smuggling that other films may gloss over. There's also some pretty well done action set pieces. It may be disappointing for those expecting it to be this year's The Town, but you could do much worse. -
Christopher H
With a basic heist plot, a standard good performance from Mark Wahlberg, and well placed reveals, Contraband entertains more than the average action film. Ben Foster proves he's a main event player (if he hasn't done so already) with a deep performance that exemplifies all… More
With a basic heist plot, a standard good performance from Mark Wahlberg, and well placed reveals, Contraband entertains more than the average action film. Ben Foster proves he's a main event player (if he hasn't done so already) with a deep performance that exemplifies all the qualities that we have grown to love from him. The suspense is also well placed, with tons of close-calls and mishaps. Though I saw this being a rip-off of Gone In 60 Seconds (also starring the talented Giovanni Ribisi), it was actually a nice companion piece, nailing the same marks yet in a different and entertaining way. -
Nick S
In what fashion Mark Whalberg appears in, this typical heist film has an needlessly convoluted plot and just stale characters. Whalberg seemed like a forced bad ass, and the story sounds all too familiar, "Gone in Sixty Seconds", anyone? I couldn't help laughing at the… More
In what fashion Mark Whalberg appears in, this typical heist film has an needlessly convoluted plot and just stale characters. Whalberg seemed like a forced bad ass, and the story sounds all too familiar, "Gone in Sixty Seconds", anyone? I couldn't help laughing at the whole duck-tape mask thing, and the film itself wasn't very impressive. I know I've been ripping on it, but I will admit that the film had some cool action, but that's really it. The story is just "complex" for no real reason but to make it into a feature. The characters are rather stale, and I really didn't care about any of them. It's the typical January release. The visuals weren't that impressive and the acting wasn't that great. There isn't much more to say. It's just a stale movie that won't be remembered. -
Sam E
Contraband was entertaining enough but its happy ending was almost too happy, in turn detracting from the seriousness of the entire film. -
Philip P
The definition of contraband is goods that have been imported or exported illegally. Add to that a bucket of heist movie cliches sprinkled with some credible actors here and there, mix it all together and you have what is a completely average film. The star power can't outweigh… More
The definition of contraband is goods that have been imported or exported illegally. Add to that a bucket of heist movie cliches sprinkled with some credible actors here and there, mix it all together and you have what is a completely average film. The star power can't outweigh the story and the ambition can't get past well, the story. Movies like this, ones we know by heart, are at this point all about the way they are told rather than what they are telling. "Contraband" is a by the numbers action flick that surprisingly skips out on a good amount of the action. After his good run with "The Fighter" in 2010 Mark Wahlberg sat 2011 out but returns early with this one and solidifies what I was always afraid of. The guy is a valid presence on screen sure, he carries himself well and has a certain charisma to him but if his material isn't strong neither is he. It showed in "The Happening" where he was a joke and "Max Payne" where he did about the same thing as he does here. Luckily the guy knows how to pick projects and this has held his head above the water his entire career. He's good when he gets it, he needs to keep exploring his range as he's done lately with ridiculous comedies like "The Other Guys" as well as dramatic material like "The Lovely Bones" where he was miscast, but he did a solid job. "Contraband" is not the next step Wahlberg needed to take, if anything it was one step back from where I expected him to go. To watch Marky Mark and his funky bunch smuggle goods throughout a two hour period while Giovanni Ribisi and Ben Foster are underused while carrying the more intriguing plot is not Wahlberg's fault but he might as well have been smuggling the money right out of our pockets. Not only have we seen the film before but we have seen Wahlberg play the role before. If you saw "Four Brothers" then you already know Chris Farraday. Wahlbergs character here is a retired criminal who used to be a world class smuggler. He has since become a family man, marrying Kate (yes as in Beckinsale) and settling down with their two sons. Also retired is Chris's best friend Sebastian (Foster). They have both since began their own businesses and seem to be adjusting well to a life with upstanding morals and little risk. Of course, Chris is soon forced back into his old ways when his brother in law Andy (Caleb Landry Jones) decides to start making his own runs and ends up pissing off a drug lord. The tag line on the posters is "What would you hide to protect your family?" and though this would like to make you think that is the main focus of the story we all know why we are really here and that is to watch famous people steal stuff and almost get caught. This would be fun too, even thrilling if it weren't so dull and oddly paced. Like I said earlier though, for a January release that promises to be a mindless escape it depends too heavily on the cliches and twists the story piles on rather than just letting it play out while focusing on the excitement that these scenes should be inducing. While you could say if they had done that I would be complaining about the opposite fact that more time was spent on explosions than on development you would be wrong, because that is not the reason this movie exists. Even if it tried to make genuine people out of the characters on screen the actors would be hard pressed to create something original from the archetypes they've been given. The real mystery and intrigue of the plot though is the Ribisi/Foster story line. We probably see it coming and sorry if you consider that a spoiler, but it is clearly the more interesting dynamic of the film. If the whole run is going to center around the Panama shoot out we are going to need a balanced focus and more depth to the relationship and backstory Sebastian has with those around him. Foster is a more than capable actor who sways back and forth between generics like this and smaller, indie flicks. He does what he can with his role, as does Ribisi playing up every stereotype there is about a confused white drug dealer. The few spotlights they do get give us a glimpse at what might have been had the script taken that chance of moving from safe crowd-pleaser to insightful caper. What really makes me curious about the film though is how it attracted so many rather credible stars. Sure Wahlberg is here to make sure his reputation as a bad ass action star stays strong, but Kate Beckinsale in a role that could be relegated to minor doesn't make much sense; not when she has the lead in a franchise film opening next week. Either she wasn't very busy or it's a great PR move to get her on screen and guaranteed Underworld trailers in front of this movie all weekend. Then you have Diego Luna who rarely takes a role in a big Hollywood production, much less a generic one such as this, as a crazed drug lord. Luna's character Gonzalo does set up the biggest action piece of the film where he and his gang hijack an armored truck to steal some priceless paintings (the fact these are Pollack's isn't revealed until the end, but it is the best running joke in the movie as they use the painting for a tarp). The film tries its best to make Panama a character in the film, but too little time is spent there as is it in the bayou of Baton Rouge where all of our characters reside. The thing is, most of the action takes place on these ships and in this regard the film succeeds as we become acquainted with every aspect of the ship. We even get to know the dirty, smart alleck captain played by J.K. Simmons, another actor I was equally pleased to see as well as confused by why he was even there. "Contraband" is really nothing to get worked up about though. You go in expecting nothing more than what the final product delivers and it does, in the end, turn out to be a rather enjoyable film; just one you would probably never care to see again. It is a film completely manufactured on what a mass audience feels they need out of a film like this and to a certain degree there is nothing wrong with that. I went to the theater expecting a good crowd but not the nearly sold out one that was actually there. It became clear that what the people were there for was to allow themselves a slight getaway with a reliable star. Wahlberg may not know this many people rely on him to deliver a good solid film but here's hoping he begins to realize it and approaches every project with the care and dedication that he did "The Fighter". It would have made for at least a more engaging time at the movies if not a more action packed one. Because really, isn't that what we all really wanted to see this for? -
Jason R
The cast was really good and for the most part the film was entertaining. It dropped the ball towards the end, but overall. It was worth a look.
Cast
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Mark Wahlbergas Chris Farraday -
Kate Beckinsaleas Kate -
Ben Fosteras Sebastian
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Giovanni Ribisias Tim Briggs -
Lukas Haasas Danny Raymer -
Caleb Jonesas Andy
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Diego Lunaas Gonzalo -
J.K. Simmonsas Captain Camp -
Robert Wahlbergas John Bryce
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Jason Mitchellas Walter -
Paul LeBlancas CBP Officer -
Amber Gaiennieas Danny's Bride
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Kent Jude Bernardas Tommy Raymer -
David O'Haraas Jim Church -
Anthony Colemanas Marcus
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Jackson Bealsas Desmond -
Jacqueline Flemingas Jeanie -
Connor Hillas Michael
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Bryce McDanielas Eddie -
John Wilmotas House Owner -
Dane Rhodesas AA Guy
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Juliette Marie Enrightas Sadie -
William Luckingas Bud Farraday -
Ritchie Montgomeryas Sebastian's Cousin
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Victor Hernándezas Edwin -
Shannon Marisas Interviewer -
J. Omar Castroas Benito
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Michael L. Nesbittas Chief Mate -
Jack Landryas Second Mate -
Kevin "Lucky" Johnsonas Tarik
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Olafur Darri Olafssonas Olaf -
Carlos Compeanas Port Pilot -
Kirk Bovillas Crew Member
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Rose Biancoas Superintendent -
Brian Nguyenas Taxi Driver -
Roland Ruizas Kid
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Ian Casselberryas Kinkos -
Victor Lopezas Skinny Kid -
Michael J. Tayloras Band Member - Lead Vocalist
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John Russ Broussardas Band Member - Washboard -
Mike Broussard, Jr.as Band Member - Saxophone -
Arthur O. Thomasas Band Member - Drums
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Andrew Autinas Band Member - Guitar -
Beau St. Pierreas Band Member - Trumpet -
Ashton McGeeas Band Member - Trombone
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Telissa Longas Band Member - Vocals -
Norman E. Landeche IVas Band Member - Piano -
Allan Maxwellas Band Member - Bass
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Laura Bergeron-Iglesiasas Rosa -
Eddie Fiolaas Armored Truck Driver -
Max Danielsas Armored Truck Driver
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Joshua Teixidoras Boss -
Randy Austinas Deckhand -
Anthony Frederickas CBP Officer
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Michael Beasleyas Davis -
Turner Crumbleyas Laird -
Lance E. Nicholsas CBP Agent
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Anthony 'Ace' Thomasas Construction Worker -
Eric Weinsteinas Trucker -
Cecil M. Brownas Auctioneer
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Kent Bernhardas Tommy Raymer





