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Certificate 15, 117mins

Nick Cassavetes is the son of one of America’s most revered film directors. John Cassavetes (1929-89) made cheap cinema look intellectually respectable. He was pure jazz. His shooting style was fast and loose, and his plots were ugly. But he adored actors. He encouraged them to improvise. Some say he is the godfather of modern cinema.
The young Cassavetes has always been in awe of this magic. He inherited the desire. He inherited the stars. He’s made expensive films. But precious little has genuinely clicked. Even by art-house standards, Nick’s career has had to unfold under the most intimidating of shadows. He has been blessed with advantages his father could only dream about. He has secured parts as an actor in a healthy spread of Hollywood fare. He has directed glittering casts in films that perhaps promised more than they delivered. But Alpha Dog is topical and controversial; the story clearly shines with his own useful disillusions and search for artistic point. I suspect Cassavetes Sr might have been pleased.
It is the first film Cassavetes has shot in anger, and it rings worryingly true. The tabloid details are all too familiar. The director lays out the acts like a court case. There are subtitles announcing who is whom and an endless list of times and dates. This is because the film is the “fictional” mirror of a real crime that narrates the six-year pursuit by the authorities of an LA drugs king-pin.
A gang of white, rich kids is running rampant in the middle-class districts of LA. They are Eminem clones with respectable parents who are too busy to care. Emile Hirsch will never play a role as fabulously cruel for the rest of his career. He is Johnny Truelove, a drug dealer and would-be Tony Soprano. He has cash, girls and sacks of drugs. Most of all he has Bruce Willis (armed with a convincing hairpiece) as his father. We know Bruce is mean meat from the first scene. He is sitting in an armchair in his bungalow being interviewed about a murder that may or may not involve his wayward son. A tiff between the local Nazi nutter, Jake (Ben Foster) — who can’t pay his crack bills — and the arrogant Johnny sparks an insane plot.
If the film wasn’t based so closely on the truth it would be hard to swallow. It took two years for Cassavetes to picklock the legalities.
Johnny persuades trusted members of his gang to kidnap Jake’s 15-year-old brother, Zach (a great and humbling performance by Anton Yelchin). The wisdom of this clumsy snatch is quite lost on Justin Timberlake. He is Frankie, and he has the attention span of a slug. He is Johnny’s best friend, and the unwitting heart of the movie.
Johnny charges Frankie to guard the kidnapped boy. Frankie promptly forgets his jail duties. He likes Zach, and Zach doesn’t mind being kidnapped. Frankie’s dad has a huge swimming pool. The deck chairs are full of teenage totty, and the cast is contractually obliged to ignite a large Camberwell Carrot every ten minutes. Zach, the prisoner, has never had it so good.
Cassavetes assembles his chilly twists around Hirsch. The actor’s eyes glitter with deadpan pleasure. His character Johnny is demonic. He might be Pinky from Brighton Rock, or a young James Cagney. But that’s too exotic. Hirsch wears a back-to-front baseball cap, a mobile phone and a smirk. The cruelty is banal. That’s the creepy power. It helps that his father is the neighbourhood bruiser. And it’s a given that his No 1 desert island tune would be Guns and Bitches by Gangstas in the Hood.
This sheer lack of communication is the honest and electric shock. No one, including Willis, is immune. The real crime is that the entire morality of a generation is being tapped out by teenagers on mobile phones.
Cynics will doubtless fear Alpha Dog for all the wrong reasons. They will fume about its credibility. They will wonder about the phenomenal number of tattoos on show. They will link the casual horror of this film to Monday’s murders in Virginia.
True, Alpha Dog is a film with no manners. But it has great nerve. What’s truly impressive is how the splintered story is buried by individual performances. That shows great skill and brave directing. Timberlake is a revelation as the Pontius Pilate of thugs. His fealty is tragic. It twists his wits. It contradicts conventional wisdom. But that’s the nature, and loyal demand, of friends. I think many teenagers will enjoy and understand this.
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When I first saw the previews for this movie I was like "I don't think it will be a good movie, a movie with Justin Timberlake, yea righ." Then one night M and a couple of friends were at the video store and saw it, we were like sure there is nothing better. We rented it and when we watched the movie we were all glued to the television. We were all just so captivaed by this movie. We thought that every actor did a really good job, they each played their character so well. When the movie was over we sat around and talked about it for like 2 hours. It was a great movie, I went out a bought the movie. I watch it all the time. What was even better was the fact that we all were able to connect with the characters, being young ourself, and at one point and time we all partied like that so we were just like damn.
Mellissa, Milford, Michigan
the first time i saw it, i was in a pool of tears...i watch the movie everyday on DVD. every time i see the movie it's like the first time i am watching it. i am a mother my self i have a son, and i would die if something like this would happen to my son. the movie was great..the director was able to captivate the heart of the viewer. i wish johnny truelove conviction will come soon. anton yelchin played the role amazingly great. i cannot forget his face when he was begging for his life, great actor!
Grace Adams, Los Banos, Laguna, Philippines
This film was absolutley fantastic. Not because it had young kids going wild and partying and taking drugs, smoking and downing alcohol like theres no tommorow. Because it has 'meaning'. Through the film you can really imagine how every character is feeling and all the parts are played great. I can remeber times in recent years (i'm as old as Zach) when i've been faced with situations that are obviously not on the same level but that do bear resemblence.
Josh, Hull, U.K.
This movie really got to me.I to did not understand at first,but as the movie played out it was great.For the people that didnt get this movie.....wow.I think everyone has been in one of the charecters shoes at one point or the other.It really took me on an emotional trip.I cant stop thinking about it.Being a mother of two children,then remembering what its like to be a kid and be so thoughtless and unknowing of what could happen .it hit where it hurt.It was amazing
Jodie, Las vegas, nevada
this film imo was dire, felt like a parody the whole way through.
the scene with sharon stone in the fat suit is the most unintentionally funny scenes in the history of cinema!
the fact this is getting good review bemusses me, i must say!
awful stuff.
worst casting on film in long time too
nolly, dublin,
This film is, like more and more are, one you get or one you don't. I for one am doubtful that a 'serious emotional journey' is any more genuine than lightweight pap in refelcting real life. Yes, the reviewer has it right. Many teenagers (and late twentie-somethings) will enjoy and understand this. Itdoesn't set off a whole load of alarm bells at mass tattoos and pointless antics. Most people, whatever the canvas, live their lives out in exactly the same pointless way. Think I'm reading too much into it? Think again. The film has real heart and some good acting. Its not brilliant, but its accurate. And accrurate is good. When Sharon Stone sayas at the end 'somebody tell me what we're here for' she's accurate. Its what everyone is really starting to feel. Decent film-and Timberlake can act a bit!
Carl, Birmingham, UK
This film is, like more and more are, one you get or one you don't. I for one am doubtful that a 'serious emotional journey' is any more genuine than lightweight pap in refelcting real life. Yes, the reviewer has it right. Many teenagers (and late twentie-somethings) will enjoy and understand this. It doesn't set off a whole load of alarm bells at mass tattoos and pointless antics. Most people, whatever the canvas, live their lives out in exactly the same pointless way. Think I'm reading too much into it? Think again. The film has real heart and some good acting. Its not brilliant, but its accurate. And accrurate is good. When Sharon Stone sayas at the end 'somebody tell me what we're here for' she's accurate. Its what everyone is really starting to feel. Decent film-and Timberlake can act a bit!
Carl, Birmingham, UK
This was the worst movie I have seen for years. If I were not with someone, I most definitely would have walked out. Who has time to waste watching such completely inane, irritating, stupidity? Who has time to watch idiotic frat boys with unbelievably gorgeous babes making out with them at every turn. Okay if you are going to see a different kind of film. But for something that is trying to take me on a serious emotional journey, how about investing me in some humanity? The fact that it is a true story makes it more interesting. Too bad I couldn't believe their rendition, or care. Justin Timberlake and Anton Yelchin have worthwhile moments, but then the terrible plot breaks in annoyingly and insulting. What a complete waste of time.
Charlotte Rademaekers, London, UK
This movie was brilliant it did take a while to get into as i did not understand it at first but suddenlly it pounces and is brilliant and beleive me the whole cinema was on their seats shouting at the screen.
Courtney, Belfast, Northern Ireland