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Formula 51
(2002) Starring:
Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Carlyle
Director: Ronny Yu
Rating: R
Studio:
Screen Gems
Review
Posted: 10.18.02
Spoilers:
Minor
Rating: 3/4
By
Harvey S. Karten.
We learned from Danny Boyle's
movie "Trainspotting" one which the producers insisted did not
condone the use of drugs-- that heroin is 1,000 times better
that your best sex. For some in the audience, this may not sound
like too great a deal. Nonetheless in Ronny Yu's "Formula 51,"
Elmo McElroy (Samuel L. Jackson) tones down the hype, telling
his prospective buyers that he has put together a drug made with
legal ingredients that, in a combination whose formula is known
only by him is fifty-one times better than coke, Ecstasy, and
amphetamines.
"Formula 51," filmed on location
in Liverpool, begins with what looks like a one-joke affair (Sam
Jackson in a kilt which he wears throughout the story) but Mr.
Yu melds scripter Stel Pavlou's drug dealers, an assassin, a
millionaire businessman, an assortment of skinheads and a cop on
the take into a stunning whole, loaded with laugh- out-loud
dialogue, the fast pace that we expect from a director whose
specialty is martial arts fare, a particularly appealing
performance from Emily Mortimer, an Emily Watson kind of gal
acting against type, and some remarkable chemistry among
Jackson, Robert Carlyle and the aforementioned Mortimer.
"Formula 51" has a car chase that
reminds us of Jean Reno's exhibition in "Ronan" as Jackson's
character, not even accustomed to driving on the right side,
does just fine pointing a Jaguar against traffic. His Elmo
McElroy has the knowledge of pharmacology to blow up rooms and
to implode people's bodies, yielding one scene reminiscent of
teen gross-out comedy and another that transforms a room into a
bloody mess. Stick around during the final credits and you'll
find out just why Jackson wears a kilt and how he uses his golf
clubs not only for socking it to skins but for putting on the
green.
The story opens in 1971 as Elmo
McElroy (Samuel L. Jackson), driving in California just after
his certification as a pharmacist, is busted for drug possession
thereby losing his ability to practice his trade. Obsessed for
the next thirty years with a desire to use his chemical skills
for making big bucks, he happens upon a formula for a blue pill
that's so powerful that its users can expect a personal visit
from God. Since the asking price for a mere piece of paper
carrying the formula is twenty mil, rivals compete for the
action, including a grossly evil "Lizard" (Meat Loaf) who hires
assassin Dakota Phillips (Emily Mortimer) to kill anyone
standing in the way of delivering the pharmacist to him; a cop
on the take, Virgil Kane (Sean Pertwee); and McElroy's personal
escort, Felix DeSouza (Robert Carlyle), hired to take him to
wacky drug kingpin Iki (Rhys Ifans).
The action moves so rapidly
throughout, with several zoom-in, zoom-out shots by
cinematographer Poon Hang Sang, that "Formula 51" even squeezes
in a hot affair between the assassin and the escort. Characters
are sharply drawn: you won't likely mistake one for another.
Emily Mortimer shines as the conflicted one, taking the job of
professional killer only to pay off her gambling debts to
Lizard, but secretly holding the torch for the boyfriend whose
heart she broke two years earlier. Obligatory double-crosses are
followed by revelations, as Sam Jackson ultimately bares all.
Edge fun all around.
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