Tricoast Entertainment have been
kind enough to allow us access to their current slate of films and the first of which I plumped for was ‘Lone Star
Deception’ (Dir: Okolo, D. 2019) a political thriller set in Houston in the
eponymous Lone Star state of Texas. The plot revolves around Tim Bayh, a
veteran from the war in Afghanistan, who is thrust into the treacherous race to
become governor of Texas when the incumbent democrat nominee drops out after a
blackmail plot emerges. Bayh’s financiers and would-be puppeteers find that he
is not as easily manipulated as they’d hoped when he takes matters into his own
hands.
The trailer promises tension and
thrills by cutting together all of the shots of guns and blazing buildings, but
the moments of action are few and far between in the film’s 1hr 45min running
time. Lone Star Deception is directed by Don Okolo and Executive produced by Ed
Dezevallos, who are credited as the screenwriting pair, and it is here that we
might find what went wrong with this film. Good films are often created through
tension between directors and studios, or through creativity pushing against
industrial or economic constraints, and it is through this friction that
inventiveness emerges. Watching ‘Lone Star Deception’, one gets the feeling
that no-one had the authority to challenge Dezevallos and Okolo’s filmmaking so
they were left unchecked. What results is a film that struggles to find the
competence to meet its own ambition and is hamstrung by a script that is at
times utterly baffling.
The film’s protagonist is played
by Anthony Ray Parker who at 6ft squared casts an imposing figure. You’ll know
Anthony Ray Parker, from 1999’s ‘The Matrix’ (Dir: Wachowski, L &
Wachowski, L. 1999) in which he played Dozer and no doubt had to utter some
equally bonkers dialogue as he does in this. He is a good looking, deep voiced,
man-mountain, but his performance is very troubling; he seems to be trying out
‘Pinteresque’ pauses whilst waiting for his autocue to catch up half-way
through his sentences and as he does so, forces his bottom lip upwards to
inhale as though he can literally smell how ripe the dialogue is. At one point
a character named Cabrese becomes particularly agitated, so Bayh (Parker) has
to verbally restrain him by saying “Easy Cabrese!”. Faring better is Eric
Roberts who, in the role of Bill Sagle the machiavellian mobster behind Bayh’s
campaign, breezes through his scenes with dastardly relish and his charisma
seems to mask any dubious lines. Eric Roberts is an old hand at B-Movies and he
is very watchable.
Okolo’s direction leaves
something to desire, with some shots appearing designed to capture everything
in one go and some acting performances poorly guided, but the film has an
aesthetic quality which belies its low budget. Credit should also go to Pierce
Constanti, whose music is used for almost every minute of the film to inform
the audience’s preferred emotional response and in the most part it is carrying
the film on its back.
‘Lone Star Deception’ is a film
which mishandles its promising premise with a script that is in dire need of a
doctor, but there are pleasures to be had by embracing the high-camp and
straight to video quality. It is never lacking in hyperbole, incident and
rather exaggerated performances, that I cannot deny made for some
unintentionally entertaining moments. I will be recommending this to friends,
but with an admittedly ironic motivation.
Lone Star Deception is available
to Stream on Amazon and is probably best enjoyed with a bourbon. Make mine a
double!
Reviewer - Ben Hassouna-Smith
on - 18/8/20
Reviewer - Ben Hassouna-Smith
on - 18/8/20
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