Highwaymen

**1/2

Reviewed by: David Haviland

Highwaymen is an entertaining thriller, pitched somewhere between Duel and The Fast And The Furious, but never close to matching either, despite some impressive sequences.

Jim Caviezel plays Rennie, an intense loner, who spends his life chasing Fargo, a lunatic petrolhead, who ran over Rennie's wife and has carried on killing. When Fargo fails to murder Molly, his next prospective victim, Rennie decides to use her as bait.

It's a strong premise, with striking cinematography, presenting a grimy vision of the highway as a lawless wilderness. The film's visual strengths are emphasised by a screenplay that uses minimal dialogue, telling the story simply and powerfully through action.

The film also builds considerable suspense, as for the first half we only see Fargo's car, which is suitably threatening. Once we meet him, however, it falls flat, as he turns out to be a paraplegic, held together by a collection of braces and prosthetic limbs, about as scary as a Meccano set.

The other problem is that once Rennie convinces the girl to act as bait, the chase is over. All we're left with is one big action sequence. And even that turns out to be disappointing.

Nonetheless, Highwaymen is just about worth seeing, if only for its hilarious closing line.

Reviewed on: 01 Jul 2004
Share this with others on...
Highwaymen packshot
A vigilante goes on a road rampage to avenge his wife’s death.
Amazon link

Read more Highwaymen reviews:

David Stanners ***

Director: Robert Harmon

Writer: Craig Mitchell, Hans Bauer

Starring: Jim Caviezel, Rhona Mitra, Frankie Faison, Colm Feore, Gordon Currie, Andrea Roth, Noam Jenkins

Year: 2003

Runtime: 80 minutes

BBFC: 18 - Age Restricted

Country: Canada

Festivals:


Search database: