Why the ending was disappointing
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iroquoisjoe — 13 years ago(June 19, 2012 09:55 AM)
I tend to enjoy Law Abiding Citizen as an absurd but awesome thrillerthat is to say it is film where you are better to turn your brain off and just enjoy the show. If you think about the plausibilities or legalities you tend to be wasting your time. This movie is not made for that. There are plenty of documentaries about real law and real crime. If you mistake this for reality, wellyou get what you deserve on that.
However, the one thing I enjoy is the fact that it does pull the rug out from under you on a morality leveland it takes a bit of post-movie thinking to even realize that this has happened.
for example: It is SIMPLE to enjoy and support a father avenging his family after you watch the events unfold on screen. It is easy to go along and become engrossed as his plan continues. But, if you continue in this vein, you will even support him killing innocent people too. You will continue to actually ENJOY the killing if you never stop to think about it. You will justify it in your mind. In fact you will say this to yourself, "the guy must be justified. After all, his family was killed. I mean they wouldn't make him the bad guy after making him the good guy at first would they? That's too confusing. That means that there is something more complex and that things aren't that simple. Arghhh!" If you can not wrap your head around complexities or gray areas in lifeor worse, can not just let a movie be a movie, not a metaphor for real life, then yeah, you are not going to enjoy the show.
Me? I love watching itespecially the end. It's just a movie. Awesome, but absurd. -
gregpage — 13 years ago(October 22, 2012 03:24 AM)
I loved this movie up until the end. Nick Rice, the person responsible for everything that happens in the movie after the Shelton's family is murdered, escapes with himself and his family intact. Everyone around Rice dies a horrible death but not so much as a hair out of place for Rice's wife and kid. For this movie to have an effective ending, they needed to die and certainly Rice had to die. I'm not sure if Foxx has something in his contract that says he needs a happy ending for himself or not, but the ending was a dud.
The ending knocked this film down to a 6/10, where it should have been at least a 8.5/10.
How Rice got the bomb back to the jail before Shelton got back is something of a time-warp mistery to me. -
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tails292003 — 11 years ago(May 11, 2014 08:30 PM)
i totally loved the movie,i hated the arrogant lawyer.the movie should have ended by this prick lawyer experience the same thing with his daughter.and then killed in a long painful way.that would have been the only ending i would have liked.
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Arisuta — 11 years ago(October 05, 2014 01:03 AM)
Totally agree. For a master of the Art of War like Gerard Butler's character to leave anything to chance without contingencies in place smacks of hubris that he seemed not to have. His building would have been well disguised for what it was and there would have been some sort of device to let him know if it had been entered. A simple burglar alarm would have sufficed for goodness sake.
"Which it will be ready when it's READY!" Preserved Killick, Master and Commander. -
JurijFedorov — 13 years ago(January 05, 2013 12:41 PM)
But Shelton did achieve his goal. Rice told him in the end that he does not negotiate with murderers anymore. Shelton did place him in a higher position. So he has a man thinking like him having control over the legal system in the city - plan complete. And Rice did become a better human being, and he even appreciated his family more when it was all over. Remember, it was never Sheltons plan to kill Rice - he just wanted to teach him a lesson.
Even the mayor said that they had to do what needed to be done - no matter the small and counterintuitive rules. Exactly the opposite of what the judge and Rice said in the beginning of the movie at the murder-trial. And the mayor and Rice didn't care about their positions anymore they just wanted to do the right thing and fight the crime, that's why Rice was promoted instead of being fired and that's why he killed Shelton.
GREAT MOVIE, I think 8,5 is well deserved. (please adjust your rating)
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ChefC — 12 years ago(June 10, 2013 02:49 AM)
I agree Rice shouldn't have escaped unharmed.
Although I think they attempted to explain how he got back faster by implying Shelton had spent some time waiting out traffic/random searches inside a car park.
He encounters a road block and enters a car park to avoid it. Then you see him exiting the car park and there is no longer traffic.Gone too soon:
Firefly|New Amsterdam|Journeyman|Life|terriers|SGU|Prime Suspect -
casinada27 — 12 years ago(July 30, 2013 11:08 PM)
And that's exactly why it seems so dissapointing! J.F.'s character never seemed to assume resposibility, never acknowledged that the system was wrong or broken, never learned the lesson Clyde was trying to teach. Wich kinda sucks.
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iroquoisjoe — 12 years ago(July 31, 2013 04:01 AM)
J.F.'s character never seemed to assume resposibility, never acknowledged that the system was wrong or broken, never learned
you clearly didn't watch the movie carefully. I mean he only said it out loud while looking at the old crime scene photos.
Jamie Foxx's character even gave Clyde the chance to do the right thingto stop killing innocent people. Murdering innocent people is much worse.
On November 6, 2012God blessed America -
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kjhuang17 — 11 years ago(May 07, 2014 12:47 AM)
He was killing people with impunity even after being locked away showing that the justice system was weak.
I don't think it was the justice system that was weak; I think it was the security of the prison cell he was in. -
mauness — 13 years ago(June 21, 2012 01:18 AM)
It was the part when the girl that works under Jamie Foxx said, "I love what I do, but I want to make sure that I gave up those things [in life] for more than just a high conviction rate." And Jamie Foxx's character says nothing. That kind of says it all. I always feel that people can always justify crappy behaviour.