Xan Brooks 

A Walk Among the Tombstones review – Neeson channels Charles Bronson

Liam Neeson lends a veneer of class to this tacky adaptation of a Lawrence Block crime novel, writes Xan Brooks
  
  

Liam Neeson in A Walk Among the Tombstones
Horrible business … Liam Neeson in A Walk Among the Tombstones. Photograph: Allstar Picture Library Photograph: /Allstar Picture Library

Liam Neeson’s mission to rebrand himself as a 21st-century Charles Bronson continues apace in the course of this reductive, bone-headed detective yarn, adapted from the Lawrence Block bestseller and lining up tabloid street-scum like so many clay pigeons. Neeson plays Matt Scudder, a taciturn former cop and recovering alcoholic who once killed a kid with a wayward bullet (horrible business; he doesn’t like to talk about it). Now he’s chasing a redemption of sorts: accepting a commission from Dan Stevens’s widowed drug dealer and taking out a pair of preening psycho-killers with extreme prejudice. Neeson’s authoritative air gives this the thin veneer of class, but it remains a tacky, suspect affair. Scott Frank’s film swaggers through a grungy Red Hook neighbourhood where there’s a pigeon coop on every roof and a pair of sneakers strung from every power cable.

 

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