Patriots Day review: Boston bombing thriller isn’t subtle, but delivers on action

As a white-knuckle ride, Peter Berg’s thrilling chase film is flawless - just don't expect any insight or inclusiveness

Mark Wahlberg’s fictional cop hunts the Boston Marathon bombers in Patriots Day.
Mark Wahlberg’s fictional cop hunts the Boston Marathon bombers in Patriots Day.
Patriots Day
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Director: Peter Berg
Cert: 15A
Genre: Action
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Kevin Bacon, John Goodman, J. K. Simmons, Alex Wolff, Themo Melikidze, Jimmy O. Yang, Michelle Monaghan
Running Time: 2 hrs 13 mins

Deep into this thrilling chase film – the first of two Boston Marathon bombing movies due this year – dozens of snipers take position for a final shootout with Dzhokhar Tsarnaev only to find that a female cop from Framingham, replete with robust, sweary Boston drawl, has already staked out a rooftop position. It’s a surprising encounter in a movie that reduces almost all its other female roles to the dreary condition of Concerned Wife on Telephone.

This imbalance makes for a missed opportunity for a film that hopes to pay tribute – stay tuned for the lengthy epilogue – to Beantown’s proud community spirit.

Elsewhere, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev are drawn as disgruntled losers, in accordance with their tabloid profiles. Dzhokhar is hapless and stoned even while throwing bombs; Tamerlan is his bully-boy “stop hitting yourself” older brother.

Suffice it to say, Patriots Day is not big on insight or inclusiveness. But as a police procedural and later a white-knuckle ride in which cops give chase to bad guys, it's flawless. In the aftermath of the bombing, Peter Berg – the action director Michael Bay wants to be when he grows up – swerves effortlessly between various law enforcers, including Special Agent Richard DesLauriers (Kevin Bacon), Commissioner Ed Davis (John Goodman), Sgt Jeffrey Pugliese (JK Simmons) and (mostly) Mark Wahlberg as a fictionalised Wahlbergian-style sergeant, as they swiftly mount a city-wide investigation.

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Powered along by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross' score, the film's strongest sequence concerns Dun Meng (Jimmy O Yang), the driver carjacked by the Tsarnaevs during their eventful getaway. Commendably, Berg – who has previously proved his directorial clout on Friday Night Lights (2004) and Lone Survivor (2013) – eschews fast cuts for nerve-wrecking focus even during the crazed, explosive-heavy final stand-off.

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic