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POST
PRODUCTION JOURNAL
Tuesday November 26,
2002
BUCKING THE TREND

Posted: Mon., Nov.
25, 2002, 8:42pm PT (variety.com)
Published in Weekly Variety, Dec. 2-8, 2002
EVENHAND
___________________
A Cypress Films production. Produced by Fernando
Cano II, Joseph Pierson. Executive producer, Jon
Glascoe.
Directed by Joseph Pierson.
Screenplay, Mike Jones. Camera (Duart
color), Tim Orr; editor, Alex
Albanese; music, Joel
Goodman; original songs, Mike
Doughty; production designer, Gary Ledyard; costume designer,
Yvonne Wilburn; sound (Dolby Digital), Allen Greene; supervising sound
editor, Garrett Kerr; assistant director, James Borrego; casting,
Susan Jasso, Kim Moarefi. Reviewed at AFI
Film Festival (American Directions), L.A., Nov. 14, 2002.
Running time: 92 MIN.
Ted
Morning..........................................Bill
Sage
Rob Francis.........................................Bill
Dawes
Toby..........................................Io
Tillett Wright
Carla................................................Irene
Pena
Victor...........................................Hector
Garcia
David Mather....................................Lee
Stringer
By
SCOTT FOUNDAS
Evenhand"
revels in the prosaic nature of everyday work and the rigors of public
service. Helmer Joseph Pierson's year-in-the-life of two beat cops in
fictional San Lovisa, Texas, is borne from the same social-realist
spirit as the films of Laurent
Cantet and Ken
Loach, and unfolds in a gentle, unhurried fashion that's
increasingly rare in American independent cinema. This richly observed
character piece, a tall Texas tale of a muggy summer afternoon, looks
to make the festival rounds, with limited theatrical exposure hardly
out of the question.
Mike Jones' screenplay hurls itself into the semi-absurd realities
of police work with a zeal that recalls the best of Joseph
Wambaugh. Located far from the realm of adolescent superhero
fantasies, "Evenhand's" two newly partnered-up officers,
Francis (Bill Dawes) and Morning
(Bill Sage), may be the first
movie cops that real cops will be able to fully relate to since Bill
Paxton's sheriff in "One
False Move."
"Evenhand" follows Francis and Morning as they go about
their daily business, busting vagrants, graffiti artists and juvenile
delinquents. Francis, who has just transferred to San Lovisa after
going through a divorce, is the idealist who goes out of his way to be
nice to everyone and for whom "Serving our community" is
more than just a slogan affixed to the side of a police cruiser.
Conversely, Morning is the gregarious big-man-on-campus, who plays by
his own rulebook where police work is concerned. At one point in the
film, Morning chases down a suspect and hog-ties him with the skill of
a champion rodeo rider.
But "Evenhand" is much less concerned with what makes
Francis and Morning different than what makes them alike -- namely,
their shared commitment to doing the best job they can, given the
circumstances. Jones and Pierson capture the frustration of public
service -- the way that trying to do the right thing, day-in, day-out,
can wear a noble man down. They understand the one-dimensional,
black-and-white depiction of cops and buck the trend.
Pic's strongest asset is Sage, who gives a triumphantly
snarling/funny/wounded performance in the movie's showiest role. Jones
(who is a Texas native) and Pierson (who isn't) have really done their
homework here, so that the fictional San Lovisa comes to life on the
screen with a vividness of local atmosphere such as most movies have
forgotten about. "Evenhand" is a film all about looking
beyond familiar surfaces.
next:
A
DRAM OF SINGLE MALT
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