Trending
Most Read
  • City Slang: New Black Dahlia Murder album lands at number 32 on Billboard charts
    Everblack, the new album from local metal heads Black Dahlia Murder, released on Metal Blade Records, entered the Billboard top 200 at number 32. According to a statement, “The album also landed at #3 on the Billboard Current Hard Music Albums chart (behind Black Sabbath and Queens of the Stone Age). Additional chart debuts include #3 on the Billboard Hard Music Albums, #9 on the Billboard Independent Albums, and #30 on the Hits Albums Chart. Additionally, the album peaked at #15 on the iTunes album chart, and #2 on the iTunes Metal chart, second only to living legends Black Sabbath.” BDM’s Trevor Strnad reacts to the success of the album: “We are thrilled that “Everblack” is being so well received by the fans and we thank them truly from the heart for picking the album up. It’s been an amazing ride so far and the new album is our proudest moment yet. THANKS!!” Click here to join the City Slang Turntable community!!! Follow @City_Slang
  • Urinal Cake Records – “UrineFested” 6/21-6/22
    Profile: Urinal Cake Records (on Metro Times Music Blahg – “Urinal Cake Records’ First Year + New Gardens (Grows)”) “Urinefested” Local Label Showcase -2 day Fest in Detroit June 21-22nd at P.J.’s Lager House (1254 Michigan Ave), Friday: The Clone Defects, Terrible Twos, Moonhairy, Obnox, Ritual Howls, Mountains and Rainbows – - Saturday: Johnny Ill Band, Protomartyr, Growwing Pains, Drugs Dragons, K9 Sniffles, Feelings, Guinea Worms, and the Keep On Trash DJs. — Visual artwork displays by Jeff Arcel, Thelonious Bone, Davin Brainard, Zak Bratto, Joe Casey, Luke Chapelle, Jimbo Easter, Andy Gabrysiak, Ben Lyon, Johnny Lzr, Kara Meister, Nai Sammon, Timmy Vulgar, and Matt 7 http://urinalcakerecords.com – pjslagerhouse.com  ~   There seems to be a lot of local DIY record labels, lately. But Johnny Ill nonchalantly shrugs that into perspective: “Shit, there could be no one to put out your music. I’m not dong it, so I’m glad guys like Eric are doing it…”   It’s still a rarity, says Ill (a.k.a. John Garcia of The Johnny Ill Band,) for someone (like Eric Love of Urinal Cake Records) willingly financing and spending time resources for local songwriters to produce, package and distribute their works.   “The worst thing that could happen [...]
  • City Slang: Battlecross post-Orion news
    Following their triumphant appearance at OrionFest, local metal heads Battlecross has announced that drummer Kevin Talley (formerly of Six Feet Under, Chimaira and Dying Fetus) will be staying on with the band for its forthcoming tour. See Battlecross performing Slayer’s “War Ensemble” at OrionFest here. The new album, War of Will, will be released via Metal Blade on July 9, and the first single will be “Force Fed Lies”. Battlecross will be on the Mayhem Festival with Rob Zombie throughout the summer. Follow @City_Slang
  • DIA ‘Courts’ New Diners
    Who says the Detroit Institute of Arts is only for art admirers? The addition of a Friday night music schedule has found some new converts. And now food lovers can rejoice as the museum unveils a new go-to place for visitors to eat, drink, relax and socialize. It’s the newly revamped Kresge Court. Combining an elegant atmosphere with competitive prices, visitors can enjoy an array of gourmet snacks, sandwiches, salads and desserts that use regional ingredients. Befitting a hip hangout, the dishes skew creative. If you’re stopping by for a quick lunch, you’ve got to try the fine ficelle salad. The stars of this show are prosciutto, black mission fig jam, wild arugula and European-style thin sourdough baguette. The green goddess salad features local greens, carrot ribbons, marinated summer squash, sunflower seeds and currants. Other offerings include DIA deviled eggs and wasabi tobiko caviar; artichokes, radish, black olive aioli and flatbread; toasted farro salad with shaved fennel; surryano dry-cured ham with hot pepper pickles and more. Desserts include Italian pudding with bittersweet chocolate, seasonal fruit croustade, and an alcoholic spin on a Detroit classic, a Boston rum cooler with Vernor’s ginger ale, French vanilla ice cream, Captain Morgan spiced rum, [...]
  • The 1943 Detroit Race Riot, 70 years later
    Mention “Detroit” and “riot” to most metro Detroiters today, and most people will think of the year 1967. Some will call it a “riot” and some will call it a “rebellion,” but chances are that nobody will talk about Detroit’s forgotten riot, the 1943 Detroit race riot. Most likely, that’s because the events of 1943 don’t neatly dovetail with our conventional narratives about the Greatest Generation, and they provide ugly examples of white racism that most area residents, if they remember them, would rather forget. And that’s a shame, because the 1943 riot offers a chance to look beyond  simplistic sociological assumptions about ’60s civil disorder and the ensuing urban disintegration. This is especially interesting at a time when historians such as Thomas Sugrue are re-examining Detroit and the roles played by whites and their institutions, often uncovering sweeping antecedents that transcend a passive white exodus. And for those whites who think the ramifications of institutional racism are overstated, those old photographs of white mobs rampaging up and down Woodward Avenue, beating and stabbing black Detroiters, might change a mind or two. And 1943 is also worth another look because it helps define the early civil rights movement. It saw African-Americans effectively [...]
  • Oh Criminals, Where Art Thou?
    I would be lying if I said I wasn’t a little disappointed with my Detroit experience so far. In the past 8 months, I have no gunshot wounds, stabbing scars, or even a stolen vehicle to show for it. I don’t even have a lower credit score! When I told everyone I was moving here, I got a wave of backlash and pleas to reconsider. It reminded me of the time I traveled to the Middle East and, as I was boarding my flight, received a hundred text messages and calls saying, “If you go, you are going to DIE!” Well, my time in the Middle East was just as disappointing and uneventful as my time here in Motown. Where have all the criminals gone? With a nice bout of insomnia, I used to walk to the YMCA at 5 a.m. to work out in total darkness. My Dad freaked out when I told him. What my father can’t understand is that, unless you live right downtown, and once the sun sets, the streets of Detroit are deserted. No cars. No homeless people. Even the pimps seem to take the night off. I could streak down Woodward (my apologies for the [...]
Detroit Daily Deals powered by ReferLocal
Calendar

Calendar

Search thousands of events in our database.

Restaurants

Search hundreds of restaurants in our database.

Nightlife

Search hundreds of clubs in our database.

MT on Twitter
MT on Facebook

Print Email

Screens

Review: Broken City

Looking for a fix. Political thriller both convoluted and too predictable

Photo: N/A, License: N/A

Chinatown this ain’t: Crowe and Wahlberg in Broken City.


Broken City  C

Naming a movie can be a complex act of juggling marketing and artistic concerns in an attempt to stand out, but one thing a title probably shouldn’t do is give eager film critics so much ammunition. Broken City does in fact evoke visions of a shadowy, floundering, morally ruined metropolis, but it also highlights that the final screen product is a compromised, flawed mutt of a thriller.

The film’s January release, the slow season where unloved projects are tossed out into the frosty wastelands and left to die, affirms that harsh assessment. Mark Wahlberg, however, scored a surprise hit around this time last year with the solidly made Contraband, so perhaps the studio hoped for a similar result, though this dour political crime story is not nearly as much fun.

It’s a shame, because this one does appear to have a decent enough pedigree — in front of and behind the camera — to elevate it above the mid-winter box office swamp. At least it does on paper, but the devil is in the details.

Wahlberg leads the way as Billy Taggart, a heroic New York City cop forced to turn in his badge after a very controversial shooting incident in the tough slum he grew up in. Seven years later, Billy is muddling through as private eye, spending most of his time sneaking around outside bedroom windows and hounding his clients for unpaid bills. Fortunately Mayor Hostetler (Russell Crowe) kept Bill’s number handy in case he needed some dirty work done, and in this case he’s offering him a huge payday for proof that the boss’ well-heeled wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones) is fooling around with Paul (Kyle Chandler), the campaign manager of his honor’s main rival.

Barry Pepper overplays the role of the previously clean city councilman who will do just about anything to win the mayoral job, in what turns out to be a close, fiercely contested election. Both candidates sport very odd haircuts for politicians, but Crowe is also covered in enough spray tan to make him look like a bronze statue that should be in front of Yankee Stadium. Not helping his image is his collection of comfy sweaters, or his forced Brooklyn accent, which has hints of Boston and Crowe’s native Aussie dialect peeking through the cracks. 

Still, even at his hammiest, Crowe is watchable and appropriately sinister. His scenes display much more spark then those between Wahlberg and his blandly pretty love interest, played indifferently by Natalie Martinez. Catherine Zeta-Jones looks like she’s there to shoot a Prada ad, not a serious drama, and her storyline never develops into anything all that interesting. The same could also be said about the crooked real estate deal behind all the intrigue. Jeffrey Wright growls and puffs up his chest as the intense and calculating police commissioner, but his character too is underdeveloped

Director Allen Hughes, flying solo for the first time without his brother Albert, displays a steady hand, but he’s got only so much material to work with. Brian Tucker’s script has been bouncing around for several years, and once generated some serious blogging buzz as an untapped gem, but now it’s hard to see what the fuss was about. The plot is a bit convoluted, yet still predictable. The dialogue, while offering some clever flashes, too often it sounds like the dusty remnants of a B-list noir.

Despite it’s cast and ambitions, Chinatown this surely ain’t.