Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Jones Hits Mark As Tough, Emotional Marshal

David Hunter The Hollywood Reporter

Revisiting the exciting milieu of Warner Bros.’ 1993 box office smash “The Fugitive,” but with one notable difference in the absence of superstar Harrison Ford as the wily good guy on the run, “U.S. Marshals” is a satisfying action extravaganza with Oscar winner Tommy Lee Jones returning as the tough, relentless Chief Deputy Marshal Samuel Gerard.

Stuart Baird (“Executive Action”) marshals his troops with finesse, and debut screenwriter John Pogue has come up with inventive ways to pay homage to writer Roy Huggins’ characters and the original film.

The success of “The Fugitive” was rightly recognized as the dual attraction of Ford’s heroic doctor on a quest to clear his name and the professionalism of Jones’ driven bogyman to the bad guys.

Diverging from the original premise, “U.S. Marshals” lacks the first film’s simple, dynamic structure and the strong emotional bonds one forms with the desperate “runner.”

Instead, there’s a big question as to whose side the current film’s fugitive is on. Seen first in a spectacular curtain-raising traffic accident that lands him in the hospital, tow truck driver Sheridan (Wesley Snipes) is battered but in for far worse when the police find a concealed weapon in his truck. Seems the gun was used in a double homicide.

In short order he’s put on a prisoner transport plane, and before one can say “Con Air” ten times, an assassin among the convicts tries to shoot him and causes a nasty crash landing instead. Also on board is Gerard, and he helps rescue the survivors after the plane lands on a rural road, flattens a bunch of telephone poles, skids off the road, flips over and lands upside down in the Ohio River.

The plane crash is the analog of the first film’s knockout train-and-bus wreck, whose jump-off-the-dam scene is replayed with Sheridan swinging off a building in a move that would have Quasimodo demanding a stunt double.

Overall, from the early tracking of the enigmatic Sheridan through the woods near the plane crash to the climactic rounds of cat-and-mouse pursuits and surprise gun battles in New York, Baird and crew successfully keep the tension high despite some confusing plot points.

Sheridan is both a runner and shooter, as Gerard finds out in one point-blank encounter, but it’s a bit frustrating the way the audience is kept in the dark about his true identity and how he connects to the murders that one is initially led to believe he knows nothing about. Indeed, the focus is squarely on Gerard and his team.

As such, “U.S. Marshals” is a showcase for Jones, and he comes through with another convincing, grounded performance. He’s hurt but doesn’t take it personally when he’s shot at, yet he has an emotional side that comes out when one of his comrades is killed. With a more potent motive for risking life and limb than in the first film, Gerard also makes a mistake or two in figuring out who is the real bad guy.

Kate Nelligan is elegantly authoritative as Gerard’s boss. While government agent Robert Downey Jr. is a bit too devious-looking from the outset, the actor has several fine moments playing the outsider on Team U.S. Marshals.

Well mounted in all regards, the elaborate production has a rugged physicality and mostly believable sequences, with the solid, visual effects-designer Peter Donen and stunt coordinator Gary Davis.

MEMO: “U.S. Marshals” Location: East Sprague, Newport, Post Falls and Coeur d’Alene cinemas Credits: Directed by Stuart Baird, starring Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes, Robert Downey Jr., Joe Pantoliano, Kate Nelligan, Irene Jacob, Daniel Roebuck, Tom Wood Running time: 2:11 Rating: PG-13

“U.S. Marshals” Location: East Sprague, Newport, Post Falls and Coeur d’Alene cinemas Credits: Directed by Stuart Baird, starring Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes, Robert Downey Jr., Joe Pantoliano, Kate Nelligan, Irene Jacob, Daniel Roebuck, Tom Wood Running time: 2:11 Rating: PG-13