Friday, February 10, 2012
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JAKE COYLE AP Entertainment Writer
Cult classics are often defined by their flaws as much as their merits. “Boondock Saints,” the 1999 film that achieved cult status on DVD and now has spawned a sequel, certainly had plenty of flaws.

Julie Benz and Clifton Collins Jr. make up the cast of renegade characters in ‘The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day,’ a wart-filled sequel, to be sure.
ap photo
“Boondock Saints” was a ridiculously over-the-top action film about a pair of Irish-American twins who set out with guns and some reckless and boozy bravado to rid Boston of criminals and mafia.
Like its new sequel, it’s a terrible movie (though Willem Dafoe as a gay federal investigator does liven things up in the original). But for all its warts, “Boondock Saints” does have the hallmarks of a film made by an actual person — an increasingly rare sight in the slick, corporate-made blockbusters of today’s Hollywood.
That person is writer-director Troy Duffy, a former Los Angeles bartender who had no experience in movies when his screenplay for “Boondock Saints” became a sensation in the late ’90s. A bidding war ensued, and Harvey Weinstein, then of Miramax, took in Duffy as his next Quentin Tarantino or Kevin Smith. The two tangled, though, and Weinstein quickly dumped “Boondock Saints.” It was only released in a few theaters, making $30,000.
The behind-the-scenes drama of this curious, utterly unneeded sequel far surpasses the shlock on screen: Duffy makes a much better documentary subject than feature filmmaker. The 2003 documentary “Overnight” was an intimate and fascinating look at the cliche effects that sudden stardom had on Duffy.
Duffy’s twist on the old story was in speeding up the process: His bullying behavior and swelling ego got him kicked out of Tinsel Town before he had even gotten through the gate. The story is now Hollywood legend.
But tenacity is one admirable trait about Duffy. Ten years after the original, he has managed to reunite his cast for “Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day.” It’s to receive a far better release, too, this time appearing on about 70 screens.
The film opens with the two MacManus brothers (Sean Patrick Flanery, Norman Reedus) on a hillside in Ireland herding sheep. Along with Poppa M (Billy Connolly), they are lying low because the last time they were seen in public (at the end of the first film), they executed a mob boss in the middle of a courtroom.
The brothers are soon pulled back to Boston, hellbent on avenging the murder of a local priest. Catholicism runs deep throughout “Boondock Saints”: The MacManus brothers boast huge tattoos of Jesus on their backs, chant spooky-sounding scripture and always pray over the bodies of their victims.
Because it revels so thoroughly in drinking, fighting and the Catholic Church, “Boondock Saints” has been called “Irishspoitation.”
Violence is necessary to clean our cities, the films say. It’s time, one character remarks, “to get your Irish on.”
Instead of offering a picture of urban decay and crime, “Boondock Saints” gives us only cardboard cutout mobsters. It spends its energy in highly orchestrated gun fights and assassinations.
Cloaking vigilante justice (not to mention casual racism and homophobia) in religion eventually turns “Boondock Saints” from merely a bad to a distasteful movie.
What: “Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day”
Starring: Sean Patrick Flanery, Norman Reedus, Billy Connolly
Directed by: Troy Duffy
Rated: R for bloody violence, language and some nudity
Running time: 117 minutes
1/2 star
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