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The Flock


Directed by: Wai-Keung Lau
Starring: Richard Gere
Genre:
Drama/Horror
Run Time: 105 min.
Release Date:
May 2008
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
Although THE FLOCK
has some pretty good acting by veteran Richard Gere, and some okay shots
that might harken some back to THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS days, the
movie stretches credibility to the breaking point and destroys itself
against a plot that really leads nowhere.
The film is about Erroll Babbage (Gere) who works for the department of
safety and is preparing to retire. His office thrusts upon him his
replacement, Allison Lowry (Claire Danes,
STARDUST), who quickly discovers
that Babbage is obsessed with his job. And that job ain’t very fun. He
monitors hundreds of sexual offenders who are on parole in his
jurisdiction. Allison goes with Erroll on many calls to check up on his
“flock” of offenders and learns that he is in desperate need of
retirement. But Erroll is good at his job even if his methods aren’t. He
taunts sexual predators and even has physical conflicts with them.
Erroll justifies his actions by bringing up these deviants’ pasts. It is
this “good justification” that challenges the audience on some level,
letting us see how brutal Erroll is and yet how out-of-touch he’s become
(by being too close to his job).
When a teenage girl goes missing in Erroll’s “area”, he immediate leaps
to the conclusion that she was abducted by one of his flock. But how
could he know? Is Erroll that good at his job? Allison challenges him
and Erroll pushes back. Their battles become as fierce as Erroll’s need
to find this missing girl.
Although the set-up for the story was okay, it didn’t have any umpf! I
will give credit to Richard Gere, however, who plays the Erroll
character very well. Battling retirement. Worried about everyone who’s
near his flock. Disgusted with those he’s responsible for overseeing.
Disgusted with himself for having to do some of things he does. Quite a
change in character portrayal for Gere. But beyond him there’s not much
else. Some of the sets are okay (dark and dangerous) but there are so
many other problems as to be laughable.
I’ll be the first to admit that suspending disbelief is a requirement
whenever watching films. But that suspension has limits. The biggest
push against those limits is the destruction of extremely vital crime
scenes. Someone as meticulous as Erroll would know that moving a body
would be a huge no-no. Or trampling through a crime scene. Or moving
evidence. It went beyond and hurt the film to no end.
The other damaging part of this film is that we never get into Clair
Danes’ character, Allison. She’s almost dropped by the wayside at the
end of the film and we’re never privy to what her intension might be:
Will she stay or leave? Will she end up like Erroll if she does stay?
This isn’t a horrible film as it does touch on some uncomfortable moral
ground, but the story as a whole needed to be tightened up.
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Image from The Flock

DVD cost: $16.89
Purchase:
Tower.com
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The film went straight to
DVD once it arrived in the U.S.
Movie Quote: "You
can retire right this minute if you want to."
Other Actors/Actresses
from The Flock
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