
1986’s “At Close Range” is “based on a true story,” dramatizing the brutal ways and family ties surrounding gang leader Bruce Johnston Sr., who embarked on a reign of terror around rural Pennsylvania in the 1960s and ’70s. Screenwriter Nicholas Kazan (son of director Elia Kazan) looks to turn such headline news into a more intimate drama about a father and son experiencing the development of a toxic relationship while working to figure each other out. It’s the stuff of high drama, but director James Foley (coming off 1984’s “Reckless”) doesn’t pursue the melodramatic potential of the piece. Instead, the helmer generates an intensely moody understanding of bonds and games of intimidation in the endeavor, moving forward with a semi-spare study of reactions and threats. The feature carries a level of intensity as it explores a dark reunion between Brad Jr. (Sean Penn), a wayward teen who’s not interested in a future, and Brad Sr. (Christopher Walken), the leader of a criminal gang looking for opportunities in a rural location, confronted by responsibilities he has no interest in. “At Close Range” is a troubling picture, as Kazan offers a cold-blooded examination of Brad Sr.’s lethal seductions and overall viciousness, finding strong tension in scenes of direct conflict. Foley isn’t always interested in creating the most propulsive effort here, with pacing an issue as the story gradually unfolds, but he’s committed to a more interior life for the characters, searching for ways to generate emotional moments handled by gifted actors, creating some sensational moments of pressure along the way. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















