The Purge:
Anarchy
***
Dir: James DeMonaco. With: Frank Grillo, Carmen
Ejogo, Zack Gilford. 103 mins. Cert: 15
Last year’s hit The Purge ventured an superficially
eye-catching premise – what if the US Government granted its citizens an annual
mischief night, to get any crime out of their system? – before retreating
indoors into indifferently staged runaround. The sequel, again overseen by
James DeMonaco, finally thinks the idea through, following those left outside
as the Purge kicks in. Flickers of dread creep in – care of those
one-percenters co-opting the event for sicko entertainment – though again we’re
mostly in second gear: if the first movie was a lacklustre Assault on Precinct 13 (the remake of which DeMonaco penned), this
one’s a modest Escape from New York,
with growly lone wolf Frank Grillo steering representative survivors between
Gothy bikers and lip-smacking private armies. For Universal, the franchise is
clearly a low-cost, low-risk work-in-progress, but DeMonaco is improving as a
shotmaker: this entry just about plays, albeit on the level of a
straight-to-DVD item or tentative TV pilot.
(July 2014)
The Purge: Anarchy is available on DVD through Universal Pictures; a further sequel, The Purge: Election Year, opens in cinemas nationwide from Friday.
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