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Knockaround Guys

Scott Manning
October 15, 2002 | Comments (2)


Directors: Brian Koppelman, David Levien
Release Date: October 11, 2002
Rating: R (for violence, language and some drug use)
See it on Amazon

With a title like Knockaround Guys, you figure you should probably bring a raincoat for the amount of blood that will splatter off the screen from guys' knocking people around. To my surprise, this movie ended up being a very intriguing story with an odd cast of characters.

knockaroundguys (23k image)When I say "odd cast", I never really expected see actors like Vin Diesel, Seth Green, and John Malkovich in the same movie together. It is truly a diverse group of actors, but the diversity worked.

Barry Pepper plays Matty Demaret, the son of an infamous mobster in Brooklyn. After being rejected for his 14th job interview in a year merely because of his father's reputation, Demaret decides that trying to live an honest life is impossible and wants to throw himself fully into the life of crime he's turned away from since he was 12. This is easier said than done when Demaret's father doesn't trust him further than delivering takeout food. To prove himself to his father, Demoret takes on a more high profile job. When things don't go as planned, Demaret and his friends (including Vin Diesel and Seth Green) attempt to clean things up before his father finds out.

Knockaround Guys is the debut of directors Brian Koppelman and David Levien. This is a great movie to start a career off with. The directing and acting complimented each other as I felt I knew every character through and through. The directors walked a precise line as they gave away just enough of each character without revealing too much. Even with the characters that only had a few lines, there was the sense that I knew them what kind of people they really were.

Although Vin Diesel was once again typecast as the "tough guy with a rough personality", he played the character perfectly. He should, he's had enough practice.

John Malkovich was also typecast as the creep that makes you feel dirty just by being in his presence. He has yet to play this role wrong. Seth Green has been in various comedy movies and TV shows and is probably most remembered as "Scotty" from the Austin Powers series, but with this movie, he has proven that he can play more than just the goofball.

Interesting notes
One of the scenes in the movie included a shot of the World Trade Center. That led me to research the actual filming dates of this movie. It turns out Knockaround Guys was originally scheduled for release back on January 12th, 2001. It was then rescheduled five times until it finally made its October 11, 2002 release. That means this movie was going to be released before Vin Diesel's blockbuster hits Fast and the Furious and XXX. He may be a 'big star' now, but this movie was shot while Vin Diesel was just an up-and-coming.

The true meaning of the movie missed
The main problem with this movie is that the general plot is nothing new - mobsters, a job gone wrong, clean-up, etc. Because of this, most movie goers and critics will watch Knockaround Guys and pass it off as just another mobster movie. People coming to that conclusion are missing the underlying theme of the story: A man growing up his entire life denying who his family is and finally coming to a crossroads to decide if he will fully embrace or entirely shun the lifestyle he's never been able to avoid.

Although containing a recycled scenario, Knockaround Guys has an underlying theme that most people (not just sons of mobsters) face in their own lives.

Related links:
Knockaround Guys Official Site


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Comments (2):
1) Posted by: Phil B
October 17, 2002 1:57 PM

I agree with your three star rating. It's not a great movie, but a good, solid movie, fun and interesting, that actually develops the caracters instead of giving us just a charicature.
My only let down was the way the big finale was handled. I thought it could have been a lot more interesting and satisfying with a little more thought.
A guilty pleasure though was watching the scene in the bar of the confrontation between Vin Diesel and a local tough guy. Nothing new here, and you know how it is going to come out, but the process was oh so good. Seth Green was excellent, and Vin Diesel, most likely because it was before his star had shown so bright, overall had a more quiet and
underplayed role. This was nice to see. He should try it more often; you know, acting instead of actioning.


2) Posted by: Bob
December 7, 2003 3:39 PM

I agree too. It is a good all-rounder with a solid cast. My only criticms are;

1) where's the women?
2) why Dennis Hopper and that awful accent?
3) why do they have a sleazebag and a moron (Andrew Savoli and Seth Green) who can't fight rather than a couple of hardy guys like Vin Diesel?

Other than this, I'd say I enjoyed this film lots. I agree with Phil, the bar scene is the most enjoyable scene of the film-just watching Vin throw punch after punch into that unfortunate hillbilly's face made me wince every time (especially when the blood starts to flow-watch the bystanders' faces, and listen to the beautiful crunch sound!). I even rewound that scene because I liked it so much.

Also it is well acted on the most part, with unforgettable Vin Diesel tenacity and a good slice of Barry Pepper's emotional acting. Well done to all who took part in this film's production.

(unless you can't tell, I'm a big Vin Diesel fan!)


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