No one gets to choose where he or she lives. It’s a decision that is made for you before you are born and it can often shape you for good. When you come from a wealthy background, growing up in a decent neighbourhood shouldn’t be a problem or choosing to move to one, should you so desire. You have resources.
Having resources means that any
obstacles you have to face are already half dealt with because you have them. But
to those who don’t and still have to overcome any, the task is much
harder.
When you’re living in despair and among
the wrong crowd of people too, not being pulled down into your environment’s social
dynamics is often impossible. The hope of keeping a dream for a better life alive
with little or no proof of success usually is met with a fatal blow in the form of reality.
If you grew up in Charlestown, Boston,
that blow was most likely the result of an armed robbery gone wrong.
In his second feature film as
director, Ben Affleck sketches a vivid picture of life growing up in Charlestown.
Affleck co-wrote the screenplay as well as starred in this edge of your seat
crime-drama.
Doug MacRay (Affleck) is a career
criminal, but he’s had enough. After the last bank robbery he and his fellow
gang of robbers had commit, Doug realises that there’s a difference between
being forced to quit and quitting while you are ahead.
Growing up in Charlestown, nothing
good has ever happened in his life. His father was a career criminal too and his
mother left them while he was still a young boy. But, when he is forced to
follow the young bank manager they kidnapped on their last heist out of fear
that she might reveal something to the FBI, Doug’s life takes an unexpected
turn for the good when the two of them strike up a romantic relationship.
Claire (Rebecca Hall) is entirely
unaware of the true nature of the man she is busy dating, until FBI agent
Frawley (Jon Hamm) knocks on her door one day to inform her that since she
opened the safe for the robbers and are now seeing their chief suspect in the
case, she is likely to face prosecution, unless she is willing to help
co-operate and help them catch him.
Round every twist and turn, there’s a
classic standoff between the law and the lawless, complemented with some great
dark-humour moments, too.
For Doug, the hope of finding redemption in his life
by running away with Claire and starting a new one seems like a real
possibility. Who knows, perhaps his heart will be rewarded with what it has
always longed for: the opportunity to get away from the wrong side of town.
‘The Town’ is a brilliant must-see
movie.