New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu


REVIEW: Legend


By Eric Hillis, http://www.TheMovieWaffler.com

originally published: 11/21/2015

REVIEW: Legend

Given how a substantial portion of the British film industry has subsisted on London set gangster flicks over the past couple of decades (you can blame Guy Ritchie for the trend), it’s remarkable that the city’s most famous real-life mobsters, the Kray twins, haven’t found their exploits mined by countless low budget filmmakers. It’s 25 years since Peter Medak’s take on the subject, 1990’s The Krays, which cast pop-star brothers Gary and Martin Kemp as the title duo. Brian Helgeland’s Legend takes the next logical casting step, dropping Tom Hardy into both roles.

Unlike Medak’s film, which focused on the relationship between the brothers and their domineering mother, Helgeland’s film begins in 1966, with paranoid schizophrenic Ronnie newly released from a psychiatric ward, thanks to the intimidation of his psychiatrist. Waiting on the outside is his twin brother Reggie, who has been building quite the criminal empire in his twin’s absence. Thus begins a riff on Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, as Ronnie’s psychotic behaviour threatens to tear apart everything Reggie has built.

Every piece of marketing around Legend has centered around the dual casting of Hardy, and while it’s fascinating to watch at the outset, it quickly becomes a millstone around the film’s neck. The effect is quite poor when compared to contemporaries like Armie Hammer’s Winklevoss twins in The Social Network and Sam Rockwell and his clone in Moon. There’s usually a physical division between the two brothers - bar counters, tables etc - which draws unwanted attention to the effect, and in several scenes the eye-lines don’t quite match. Hardy gives an energetic dual performance but too many scenes evoke that classic Star Trek episode in which William Shatner faced off against an evil, goateed version of himself.

Writer-director Brian Helgeland is best known for penning the screenplay for L.A. Confidential, a movie that brilliantly conveyed a sense of time and place, making Los Angeles one of the film’s main characters. Sadly, this isn’t a feat repeated here; London is hidden in the background here, glimpsed through green-screen windows as a poorly rendered CG skyline, as artificial as Frasier’s Seattle. London was the center of the earth in 1966, a city at its cultural peak the way New York would be a decade later, but Legend may as well be set in Coventry in 1973 for all the context we’re given.

At over two hours, the film wastes a lot of time on extended dialogue scenes, telling us constantly how powerful the Krays are, but it rarely demonstrates this visually. Much of the film focuses on the doomed relationship between Reggie and his young bride Frances (Emily Browning), who provides an unnecessary voiceover narration, and if you’ve seen any gangster movie, their argumentative scenes together will feel all too familiar. A sub-plot involving Chazz Palminteri’s representative of the American Mafia leads nowhere, and feels inserted purely to help sell the movie Stateside. Christopher Eccleston pops up as the cop investigating the brothers, but this is another element that’s barely covered.



 
Advertise with New Jersey Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info



The sight of Tom Hardy attempting to out-act himself is just about enough to hold your attention for a good portion of the film, but after a while the lack of substance begins to weigh heavy and the strings become all too visible. East End? More like dead end!



FEATURED EVENTS

ART | COMEDY | DANCE | MUSIC | THEATRE | COMMUNITY


An Evening with Richard Dreyfuss and Screening of JAWS

Saturday, May 04, 2024 @ 7:00pm
Bergen Performing Arts Center (bergenPAC)
30 North Van Brunt Street, Englewood, NJ 07631
category: film

Click here for full description


Life After Loss Community Screening

Tuesday, May 14, 2024 @ 6:00pm
The Vogel
99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701
category: film

Click here for full description


Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Tuesday, July 09, 2024 @ 7:00pm
State Theatre New Jersey
15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: film

Click here for full description


Click here for more events

Listings are available for $10 and included with our banner ad packages.

Click here for more info.







 

LATEST NEWS


"Best of" FilmOneFest to Take Place at Smodcastle Cinemas

(ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS, NJ) -- FilmOneFest will be holding a fundraiser and food drive with a "Best of" FilmOneFest event at Smodcastle Cinemas on Saturday, April 27, 2024 at 7:00pm. The event includes crowd favorites from years past.


Avatar: The Last Airbender In Concert comes to NJPAC




NJPAC presents A Conversation with Stephen Colbert and Paul Giamatti




TIFF presents "The Tuba Thieves" and a Tribute to Pat Phillips


Click here for more event previews







New Jersey Stage

© 2024 by Wine Time Media, LLC
PO Box 811, Belmar, NJ 07719
info@newjerseystage.com

Nobody covers the Arts
throughout the Garden State
like New Jersey Stage!


Images used on this site have been sent to us from publicists, artists, and PR firms. If there is a problem with the rights to any image, please contact us and we will look into the matter.

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Threads, and on our RSS feed


Art | Comedy | Dance | Film | Music | Theatre | Ad Rates | About Us | Pitch a Story | Links | Radio Shows | Privacy Policy