Freedomland review

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If you're thinking of taking a provocative look at simmering racial tensions in the Noo Joisey suburbs, based on a novel by Clockers author Richard Price with Samuel L Jackson in the lead, chances are Spike Lee or John Singleton would be near the top of your directorial wishlist. Even if they weren't available, however, you'd tick off a few other candidates before hiring the guy who made Christmas With The Kranks and America's Sweethearts.

When you're Joe Roth, though, head of Revolution Studios and all-round Hollywood powerbroker, you can pretty much do what you like. Which explains why he's at the helm of this ponderous mix of cop thriller and social-issue melodrama, all hanging on a mystery you can probably figure out just by reading the synopsis. But we can't lay Freedomland's troubles solely at Roth's door. Indeed, if there's a culprit here it's Price himself, who has singularly failed to condense his 1998 doorstopper into a workable and coherent screenplay.

More talking book than motion picture, Freedomland's isolated sparks of drama and pathos fizzle out in an ocean of mediocrity.

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