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The Walker

The Walker (2007)

September. 30,2007
|
5.8
|
R
| Crime Mystery

An escort who caters to Washington D.C.'s society ladies becomes involved in a murder case.

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morrison-dylan-fan
2007/09/30

After hearing about her for years,I have this year being pleased to finally see Kristin Scott Thomas (KST!) in the stylish Neo-Noir Love Crime and the earthy Drama Leaving.Shortly after watching Leaving,I was intrigued to find that the BBC were going to show one of KST's English language movies,which led to me walking on by.The plot:As a photo of his tobacco farming granddaddy hangs above him, Carter Page III finds the only way that he can get near the power player in Washington is to be an escort to their wives.One of Page's main clients is Lynn Lockner,who has been having an affair with lobbyist Robbie Kononsberg (who gave Page bad advice on the stock market.) Going to pay him a visit,Lockner finds Kononsberg murdered. As Page tries to help Lockner keep the affair hidden,he begins to walk out of step with the elite.View on the film:Continuing on the major theme of his work,the screenplay by writer/director Paul Schrader walks with a Neo-Noir of the outsider looking in. Surrounded by the elite, Schrader makes Page a loner whose every feature from his hair to psychological intimacy is part of a façade for the client. Finding Kononsberg dead, Schrader splinters the Neo-Noir with cynical political shots over what power players will do to keep their piece of the pie.Keeping Page as an outsider, Schrader aims for a cerebral Noir.Whilst this approach does lead to the viewer feeling as detached from the high-life as Page,it causes the title itself to be caved in a blank,strung-out atmosphere,where the murder charge and the characters themselves are emotionless and paper thin.Entering to the wonderful synch-Blues (!) score from Anne Dudley, Schrader and cinematographer Chris Seager swagger with a Neo-Noir style,lining Page's house in deep neon blue,and the crawling camera moves giving the film a dry Erotic Thriller mood.Burning up the riches of the elite, Schrader soaks the movie in a peculiar lime green that subtly expresses how rotten and mouldy the power they hold onto is. Refusing to do press for the flick due to hating his own performance, Woody Harrelson does lay on the Southern Charm a bit too thick,but does capture Page being a completely detached Noir loner on the scene.Adding a touch of Film Noir and Neo-Noir class, Lauren Bacall and Willem Dafoe give terrific, greasy performances as Natalie Van Miter and Larry Lockner,whilst the elegant KST smoothly threads the films cold pessimism with Lynn Lockner concern about becoming an outsider,as the walker walks away.

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alcorcrisan
2007/10/01

This is a movie I happened to watch on MGM TV a few years ago, and then tried to find again, unsuccessfully, for various reasons. Woody Harrelson is simply otherwordly as this high-society gay companion to the ladies. Some scenes are reminiscent of the "American Gigolo" of Richard Gere and Lauren Hutton, but the lines are wittier and bitchier, probably because of, or rather thanks to, the homosexual tinge. The scene where, horror of horrors, he removes his wig is anthological. The sexy guys get older, yet their lines get better and better... (Or badder and badder, of course!) I would say it's almost a prequel avant la lettre of the American remake of "House of Cards". An absolute must!

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Turtle Heart
2007/10/02

Woody Harrelson is very good in this film. This turn as a polished superficial political high society companion was very well done by the actor. the cast was great all around really. the story is pretty good as well, though it could have done better....and this is my problem with this film. The directing and photography in this film are terrible. The photography (cinematography) in particular is so clumsy and artless. To much time is spent in poorly framed shots of the rooms of the rich and powerful, the intent is to be artful but really, many times it is as if the cameraman was not even looking through the camera but just dragging the camera around. I place responsibility for this on the Writer/director Paul Schrader. This film is good because the actors made it good in spite of the direction and photography in my view. Schrader has imitated a polished art film, but has yet to make one. Even so, the film is well worth watching on the strength of Harrelson and the great ensemble cast. The story is familiar but the twist here, coupled with the family history of Harrelson's character, make the storyline seem a fresh view of the mysteries of life. A view of our darker shadows from a new angle, coupled with a glimpse of light and mischief in holding your ground against the mighty big bosses of the new world order.

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MisterWhiplash
2007/10/03

The Walker is about a profession many of us aren't aware of: socialites like Mr. Carter Page III, who escort ladies who happened to be the wives of senators and congressman around Washington DC and play cards and socialize (hence the 'social' part of the title). But it's also about a murder mystery, where a man is killed who is connected with Lynn Lockner, married to senator Larry Lockner. Who killed him, for what motive, and what are the connections and the fall-out of the scandal, are all a part of the narrative for Paul Schrader, the mind-games of Washington, the slick veneer and quietly accepted facts of corruption and greed and, usually, scandal. But it's also about this man, the Walker, how he is viewed by the women he is polite to (indeed his politeness is pointed out as a weakness, as "Don't be so polite" in this DC society), and his own self flagged by the legacy of his father, a hero in the eyes of many in DC. Oh, and he's gay, though this is only the ice on the cake.For Paul Schrader, it's a mature work that shows him skillfully working out this side of DC that is fresh in perspective. He is able to write the dramatic scenes much better, however, than those of that of a thriller. One senses Schrader's investment in his own material hit high points when he just has two people in a room talking about the heart of a matter, like an argument between Carter and Emek that is really all about Carter's father but exactly about Carter the whole time, or a scene between Carter and Lauren Bacall's elder lady when he finds out a vital piece of information (the "black sheep" dialog). Scenes like those are very good, while a chase scene down an alley feels weaker, filmed with tired and repetitive dutch angles and close-ups.So, if it isn't quite one of Schrader's best films, albeit not his worst, it is definitely an achievement for Harrelson. He disappears into the character of Carter Page III (note the III) as an effeminate but strong-willed Southern man who hides his baldness with a hair piece and keeps his politeness and calm demeanor as something that is partly natural and partly a cover for what is really deep down someone who has disappointed others around him. It's so fascinating to see this actor who, indeed, once was a co-star in White Men Can't Jump, tackle such a complex character and succeed in every scene with depth and sensitivity and subtlety. He is nothing less than totally absorbing, especially up against old pros like Bacall and Ned Beatty.

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