The Town: Townie Made Good

Ben Affleck and his bank-robber role, caught between redemption, action and hometown

Directing himself as a verifiable big-movie lead after some time in supporting-actor Triple-A ball, director-star Ben Affleck models a full line of warm-up suits to play Doug MacRay, a second-generation blue-collar stickup man, brains of his four-man bank crew.

The setting is Charlestown, the square-mile majority-Irish Boston neighborhood that shares a peninsula with Cambridge; half-gentrified, it's still identified in the tagline as the "bank robbery capital of America."

MacRay's crew is among the best — or the most theatrical, judging by their costume selection, coming out like some Ozzfest second-stage act in purple-dreadlocked skull masks or nuns' habits.

The Town is based on Chuck Hogan's 2004 novel, Prince of Thieves (set, unlike the movie, in 1996, when Charlestown-affiliated heists were actually at their height). In its first chapter, Hogan's book has MacRay "tearing off his jump suit as if he were trying to shed his own criminal skin." Already reconsidering the life he's living — he's AA-pledged, sipping soda while his boys get wrecked as always — MacRay finds more motive to change in his tentative relationship with Claire (Rebecca Hall), one of the Prius-driving yuppies who have started to rent up newly chic Charlestown. Unbeknownst to Claire, Doug's the same guy who recently stormed her bank and held her hostage; their affair begins as he follow-up-stalks her, and they meet-cute at a neighborhood laundromat.

This being a character study of a gifted, lowbred ne'er-do-well with dark secrets, redeemed by a clean middle-class cutie, it's easy to see the appeal of Hogan's novel for Will Hunting's co-creator — who has since acquired a taste for big-fireball action, very freely indulged here.

Conspiring against Doug's regeneration are his on-the-block loyalties: Jem (Jeremy Renner), his best friend from second grade and lieutenant, increasingly a loose cannon on jobs, and Jem's sister, Krista (Blake Lively, slumming in hoop earrings), an OxyContin-slinging slattern whom Doug still occasionally takes upstairs. And demanding more than apology for Doug's crimes is one Agent Frawley (Jon Hamm), the head of an FBI bank-job task force, presiding over spiffy procedural scenes, trying to find a crack in the Irish omerta.

Part of this is attempted through cocky-flirty interrogations of Doug's women, some of The Town's variously successful actor duets. The interclass Doug-Claire-Krista triangle is the stuff of High Sierra, Some Came Running ... except that Lively substitutes runny eyeliner for yearning, while Affleck and Hall do not, as they say, set the screen on fire, having little time for play outside the personal confessions they're forever unloading on each other ("My brother died on a day like this ..."). Broad, stolid Affleck does more with macho pathos, goaded by Renner's shanty-Irish tough Jem, in-your-face with his squelched mug; he's fantastic ambushing Doug on a date, the smirking ghost of his townie past.

Also indelible is Pete Postlethwaite — ratlike, bandy-armed, complexion like the penny left in Coca-Cola overnight — in the small part of neighborhood boss Fergie Colm, who runs his operation from a florist's shop, owning the screen for the time it takes him to brutally trim a rose.

The Town is a scrupulously location-scouted, aggressively Boston movie. Space between scenes is filled with what amounts to a complete helicopter tour down the Charles River — interruptions adding to the movie's queerly compartmentalized feel. It's difficult to connect the film's characters to the action figures of a major set piece inside Fenway Park, or the car chase ricocheting through the narrow red-brick streets of the North End.

Picturesque qualities aside, Boston's recent popularity as a location has, I suspect, much to do with its status as refuge for a viable street-tough urban poor — who're white, and more box-office bankable ("They think there's no more serious white people," says Lively, white as snow if not viably serious). Tallying up the films shot in, say, black Roxbury won't take much time.

Clocking in at a heavy two hours, The Town does not end before Affleck wears a snicker-inspiring introspective beard. If for this alone, it misses on the big emotional gut punch — but it's good enough at least that you wish it were better.

THE TOWN: Directed by BEN AFFLECK | Written by PETER CRAIG, AFFLECK and AARON STOCKARD | Warner Bros. | Citywide
 
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5 comments
MaPol
MaPol

The Town is not only very overrated, but it sends some extremely troubling messages;

A) That it's okay to steal money that they have no right to, and put innocent people's lives and very safey at risk in order to do it, and even injure someone badly enough to put them in the hospital, if people can get away with it, and to manipulate and take advantage of a poor, scared bank manager that they've robbed and kidnapped at gunpoint and manipulate her into not going to the Feds for help, or else.'B) That it's okay for a naive or willfully ignorant person (such as Claire Keesey) to be an accessory to a professional armed felon/wanted fugitive's crimes, to help him elude the law, and spend stolen money that wasn't hers to spend for the renovation of a seedy ice hocky rink in Town.

C) That relationships that arise from the "Lima Syndrome" (the Stockholm Syndrome in reverse) or even the Stockholm Syndrome, are normal and healthy, when in fact, they're not.

Malachy
Malachy

*****************SPOILER ALERT***********As a life long Bostonian living in LA today, I was a little surprised at these "Criminal Masterminds" decision to rob three places that rival LA's traffic woes: Namely: Harvard Square, The North End and then in with Oceans Eleven pinache, the "Holy Grail" Fenway Park. Not too good for a speedy get-a-way. And although Boston media hasnt mastered the airial pursuit the way, lets say KTLA does, maybe if Ben thought about robbing the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the Half Shell Esplande durring the 4th of July celebration, could have added to the plausibility factor for me, its just seemed RETAHHDED!

MaPol
MaPol

This is something that still continues to dog me, even though I've written about it so many times. Why, oh why do so many people fall for such a hyped-up, cheap, overrated, trashy movie such as The Town, and, more to the point, refuse to accept dissenting opinions on it? It beats me...I don't know! I admit to one thing, however: The Town left me rooting for the cops and the FBI, especially Agt. Adam Frawley and wanting them to catch Doug MacRay and his men and send them to jail for their crimes, and to have Claire either criminally prosecuted herself for being an accessory to Doug's crimes and for tipping him Doug off with a "sunny days" code and enabling him to elude the law, or at least put on some sort of probation for her bullshit. Sure, I sympathized with Claire at first, because she was the victim of an armed bank robbery, which wasn't her fault, but I completely lost my sympathy for her when she not only got involved, wholesale, in a romance with Doug, but refused to sever all contacts with him even after she learned through Agt. Frawley who Doug MacRay really was, and what he was up to.. Unlike most people, who are sympathetic with Ben Affleck's character in that film, and with Claire, I am not. Why should I be sympathetic to either Doug or Claire? The idea that Doug MacRay wanted to change and redeem himself through Claire is utter bullshit, especially after he engaged in an act of vigilantism by taking the law into his own hands, going back to Charlestown, and gunning down Rusty and Fergie just because they threatened Doug's ladygirl Claire with physical harm. Come on now! Doug MacRay's still a criminal and he was not the decent guy he came across as when he and Claire met "by chance" in a C-Town laundromat. Doug MacRay, like his friends and partners in crime, are not only skilled, disciplined and ruthless in their quest for quick money through parasitic behaviors such as armed robbery, and who'd unquestionably kill or seriously injure people enough to put them in the hospital if they're considered obstacles to what they want, but Doug knows how to come across as a nice guy, when he's really not. He may not be crazy like his best friend and righthand man, Jem, but he's a sociopath and a person of unprovoked violence just the same. The fact that he came across as such a nice, charming guy and deceived Claire by pretending to be an upstanding, law-abiding citizen, when he's really not, is more than disgusting...it's part of his criminal behavior. As for Claire, the fact that she took Doug's bait and rose to it is pathetic indeed. If Doug had really wanted to change, imo, he would've turned himself and his guys in, come forward, negociated with the Feds for some protection for him and Claire, and stopped robbing banks once and for all. Doug left for Florida without Claire for two reasons: A) Doug macRay was an armed felon and wanted fugitive who'd been on the lam from the law for quite awhile, plus he'd just killed Fergie and Rusty. B) Doug had gotten what he really wanted out of Claire all along; a promise from her not to turn him in, which he got. How can so many people be so naive or willfully stupid as to miss that? Also, if Doug wanted to redeem himself, he would've come forward, served his time, and after a prison term, found honest ways to raise the funding for the renovation for the C-Town hockey rink himself, instead of using Claire Keesey as a go-between. What people don't realize is that Doug wasn't a nice guy...even to Claire, even though most people firmly believe that. The fact that he deceived her, seduced her and made a total fool out of her was vicious. The fact that Claire acted like a poor, confused, dumb-assed adolescent and allowed herself to be manipulated, made a fool out of and taken advantage of by Doug is pitiful, but she doesn't deserve pity, due to the fact that she helped the very guy who turned her life upside down and caused her a ton of grief in the first place escape the law. Now that I think of it, I wouldn't cared one iota if Doug and Claire had either ended up in jail, or been shot and thrown into the Charles or the Mystic River. An awful thing for me to say, but that's how disgusted I am with this kind of thing. As for Kristina, well, I don't like her sordid lifestyle or behavior (drug and alcohol addiction, sleeping around with too many men, and the fact that she was in the business herself by helping to book hotel rooms and get costumes for Doug and his men, and being a drug mule for Fergie and Rusty), but i'll say this: I feel kind of sorry for Krista, in a way, because she had far fewer choices than Claire; she'd grown up with Doug and Jem, who, like many other men, abused and exploited her for their own ends. Krista's daughter, Shyne, still an infant, caught in the middle of all this shit, was innocent, and I felt sorry for her, too. I'm so sick of people saying that what the white collar criminals (not defending them, btw) are worse than guys like Doug MacRay and his gang, because it's unrelated, and not true. Neither the book Prince of Thieves, on which The Town was based, or the movie, make any effort to get at causes of bank robbery and other crimes, and the circumstances under which Doug and his men had grown up under. Moreover, the movie asks the audience to sympathize with Doug MacRay and his men, as well as Claire, who acted stupidly enough to allow Doug to take advantage of her, and who became an accessory to his crimes, while considering law enforcement officials assigned to bring criminals like MacRay and company to their knees and have them locked up in penetentiaries once and for all. Dez was a smart (he was college-educated and had a regular job) but stupid guy; he was pretty much just along for the ride, and did what he was told to do by the gang, and yet, at the same time, he seemed to be pretty much their victim, as well, if one gets the drift. Dez allowed himself to be taken for a ride, also. At least the book fleshes out the characters and spends more time on Dez and Krista, and doesn't focus on the viewpoint of Doug and Jem so much, plus the book takes a far less sympathetic outlook towards Doug and his men. I also might add that The Town also normalizes the Stockholm Syndrome and its inverse, the Lima Syndrome. One doesn't have to be in any of the helping professions (i. e. psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker, etc.) to realize that, while a person who's taken hostage and falls victim to the Stockholm Syndrome (i. e. falling in love with her captor) or the Lima Syndrome (i. e. accepting the overtures of her captor, who falls in love with her), presumably has a better chance of survival in a hostage situation, the victim, in either case, is turned into a person who is at her captor's beck and call, is manipulated and controlled by him, and is essentially brainwashed into believing that her captor cares enough about her not to kill her, and that he'll always treat her kindly and not abuse her. This couldn't be farther from the truth, especially because, all too often, the victim is isolated from her friends and loved ones, and begins to blame law officials and other authorities for her troubles and turn against them rather than her captor who committed this criminal act against her in the first place. That being said, I'd say that common sense is required, in order to at least minimize the possibility of having something like that happen to him or her; Just because one meets a charming guy or gal, doesn't mean that they're necessarily out for any good, particularly if one is in an area that's known to be tough, with a violent history to it. Anybody who meets someone that they've never seen before, no matter where they are, or how charming they may be, should be much more careful, and not be so quick to accept dates with someone or get into things with people they don't know that well. Claire was a woman who used no common sense what. so. ever, and she ended up having a breakdown when it finally backfired on her. Hey...if I'd known her in real life, I'd tell her.."Hey..don't you understand that if you play with fire, you're going to get burned? Think about that!" Supposed the bank manager hadn't been as angelic-looking as Claire, or had been someone with a learning/developmental disability such as autism, Aspergers, dyslexia, ADD/ADHD, or a seizure disorder? Do you honestly believe that Doug and his men would've even acted the least bit charming and sympathetic towards her? I don't think so. Doug would've allowed Jem to do whatever he wanted with her, and she probably would've been gang-raped or "offed" by Doug and his posse of armed criminals. Don't kid yourselves, guys! Doug, contrary to how he came across to Claire, wasn't a nice guy, even to her. He was playing her, and anybody who thinks that Doug and his men wouldn't have killed her if she'd resisted and refused to comply with them is just kidding themselves. Sorry, folks, but I can't bring myself to like this film, except for the very beginning.

Bill Johnson
Bill Johnson

Workmanlike. At best. Affleck is now officially a better director than he is an actor. If that sounds like faint praise, it's meant to be.

A ridiculous amount of hype for an adequate film.

mplo
mplo

I don't think that Ben Affleck directed "The Town" so well either, Bill.  He had a falling-out with the original director and decided to take over the directing himself.  It might've been a better film if that hadn't happened, but who knows?  I think "The Town" really was overrated, and not worthy of all the hype and praise put behind it.

 

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