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    A Hostage Romance

    Funny man Jason Reitman falters in lackluster Labor Day

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 31, 2014 | 12:00 am
    Funny man Jason Reitman falters in lackluster Labor Day
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    Writer/director Jason Reitman (Juno, Up in the Air) has taken on a variety of topics in his short but lauded career, but all of his films have generally had humor as a common element. However, there’s little levity to be found in his latest, Labor Day, based upon the novel by Joyce Maynard.

    The film centers on the adolescent Henry (Gattlin Griffith) and his mother Adele (Kate Winslet). Traumatized by her past, Adele rarely ventures outside the house, only going out every month or so to stock up on supplies. It’s on one of these trips just before Labor Day that she and Henry run into Frank (Josh Brolin), an escaped prisoner who all but forces them to hide him from the authorities.

    Despite its faults, Labor Day maintains a certain kind of magnetism throughout.

    Right from the start, though, the situation feels different from the usual kind of kidnapping depicted on screen. Frank has a charismatic demeanor that is never all that threatening, mostly due to a lack of weapons. Although Adele and Henry’s reactions can initially be chalked up to shock, they quickly turn downright hospitable.

    Reitman fills in the blanks on the pasts of both Adele and Frank via flashbacks, and it’s here that he makes a small but crucial error. Adele and Frank have no prior history, but the way Reitman structures the flashbacks — with no dialogue and quick edits — there are times that he seems to intimate that their current meeting is not by chance.

    That insinuation changes the whole tenor of the film. If they had met in the past, Adele taking to Frank so quickly makes much more sense. Their quick infatuation, given her fragile psyche, isn’t completely far-fetched without that added element, but it certainly holds less water.

    The film is also ostensibly a coming-of-age tale for Henry, whose adult self (voiced by Tobey Maguire) narrates the film. But the star power of Winslet and Brolin, their characters’ budding romance, and the threat of Frank being caught at any moment overshadows any insights the film may have on a young boy needing a more involved father figure.

    Despite its faults, the film maintains a certain kind of magnetism throughout. Winslet, Brolin and Griffith all sell the unlikely scenario with their honest acting. The nebulous pasts of both Adele and Frank are easier to swallow when they’re in the hands of such skilled performers.

    Labor Day is not Reitman’s most successful outing, but it’s not the embarrassing one that others have made it out to be. It’s a solidly told drama that could’ve been elevated even higher had Reitman made some better decisions.

    Maika Monroe and Gattlin Griffith in Labor Day.

    Maika Monroe and Gattlin Griffith in Labor Day
      
    Photo by Dale Robinette
    Maika Monroe and Gattlin Griffith in Labor Day.
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    Movie Review

    Painless hero makes Novocaine a gut-busting action comedy

    Alex Bentley
    Mar 13, 2025 | 5:24 pm
    Jack Quaid in Novocaine
    Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures
    Jack Quaid in Novocaine.

    Stories featuring ordinary people faced with extreme situations have proven to be popular in film history. They range from Hitchcock movies like Rear Window to Brian De Palma’s Blow Out to the Coen Brothers’ Fargo. Recent films like Nobody and Love Hurts have put a twist on the sub-genre, featuring protagonists whose mild personas and everyman looks hide violent abilities.

    The new film Novocaine is a further twist, as the ordinary man at its center has an ability that he’s never fully tapped before. Nate Caine (Jack Quaid) is a mild-mannered assistant bank manager whose life is boring by design, as he has a disorder called Congenital Insensitivity to Pain. Being unable to feel pain, traumatic events that would stop most people in their tracks don’t faze him at all, sometimes to his detriment.

    Soon after making a rare connection with another bank employee, Sherry (Amber Midthunder), the bank is robbed and Sherry is kidnapped. Nate decides to pursue the kidnappers to try to rescue Sherry, setting in motion a series of events that a person without his condition would find unbearable. However, his inability to feel pain turns him into a kind of unstoppable machine, determined to do whatever it takes to achieve his goal.

    That synopsis of the film, directed by Dan Berk and Robert Olsen and written by Lars Jacobsen, makes it sound like a serious action film, but it’s actually an action comedy that finds a unique angle for its hero. The filmmakers portray Nate’s condition, if not completely accurately, then with an air of plausible realism. The laughs come not at his expense, but in reaction to how he repeatedly uses his ability to his advantage.

    The result is a violently graphic film that rivals ones like John Wick in what it showcases. Knowing he can’t get hurt, Nate has no issue putting himself in harm’s way, whether it’s burns, gunshot wounds, impalements, and more. The amount of damage done to him could make the film into a kind of live-action Looney Tunes, but the filmmakers manage to walk the line between hilariously ridiculous and eye-rollingly stupid.

    The romance between Nate and Sherry provides a nice through-line for the story, with a few good twists and turns along the way. The lone big misstep of the film is Nate’s friendship with Roscoe (Jacob Batalon), one developed through online gaming that turns into real life by necessity. It takes a long time for them to get any scenes together, with their interactions ultimately feeling unnecessary.

    Quaid seems to be hitting his stride as an actor, starring in The Boys on Prime Video and in the recent Companion. He does a great job of never overplaying this role, keeping Nate as a regular person despite what he’s able to do. Midthunder is hit-and-miss, as the story takes her character through a yo-yo arc. Betty Gabriel and Matt Walsh do serviceable work as detectives tracking Nate, delivering exactly what’s expected of them.

    Novocaine is much better than it probably had a right to be, with some solid storytelling, some intense action, and a fantastic lead performance by Quaid. Humor and graphic violence don’t always go hand-in-hand, but this film finds a way to combine them in memorable ways.

    ---

    Novocaine opens in theaters on March 14.

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