Find » Arts & Entertainment » Movies » Alpha Dog Lacks Bite

Alpha Dog Lacks Bite

By Neil Miller, published Jan 22, 2007
Published Content: 8  Total Views: 1,036  Favorited By: 0 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.3 of 5
Toward the end of the year, and on into the month of January fans of cinema everywhere are bombarded with the last ditch efforts of studios to capture the limelight and rake in some coveted Award season hardware. With that onslaught come some excellent films, as seen this year with the likes of Pan's Labyrinth or Children of Men.

In some cases, films of this nature are held until the end of the year in order to maintain that fresh Oscar scent. On the flipside, every year gets its share of Oscar bait-and-switch - movies that show promise but don't quite make the cut. This year gives us Alpha Dog, a film that is doomed to be more of a lukewarm January filler than a serious late season contender.

Now, marketers over at Universal Pictures would have you believe that Alpha Dog is to be the breakout vehicle for pop star turned Saturday Night Live host turned actor Justin Timberlake. But Timberlake ends up playing second fiddle to other young talents, such as Emile Hirsch (The Girl Next Door) and Ben Foster (Six Feet Under, X-Men: The Last Stand). Hirsch plays Johnny Truelove, a neighborhood drug runner in suburban California who takes up a beef with Jake (Foster) over a deal gone sour.

In order to best live up to the legacy of Scarface (whose poster adorns his bedroom wall), this Halfling gangster decides to kidnap Jake's brother (Anton Yelchin) and hold him as collateral until the debt is paid. As you can imagine, what began as a fun game with some pot dealing breaks into what can only be described as terribly formulaic studio drama that ends as you would expect - just not soon enough.

Adding to the otherwise predictable plot, penned by Nick Cassavetes (The Notebook), is the annoyance of Mr. Timberlake, who spends much of the first two thirds of the film gallivanting around like the court jester in Johnny Truelove's kingdom of wannabe gangsterism. In the final moments of the film, his performance sures up considerably, allowing him to show off what those pesky marketers want you to see - he can actually act.

Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Advertisment