* * *
In Halifax, Canada, a tough amateur is living the dream of playing for a professional hockey team, but he may not be tough enough to beat his new rival – or to cope with his new arrival.
Starring Seann
William Scott, Alison Pill, Wyatt Russell, Jay Baruchel, Elisha Cuthbert, Kim
Coates, Liev Schreiber
Written by Jay
Baruchel, Jesse Chabot
Produced by David
Gross, Jesse Shapira, Jeff Arkuss, Andre Rouleau
Duration 101 minutes
I came to this sequel having not seen the original GOON, but I got the gist: regular-Joe hockey fan demonstrates a talent for aggression and is hired by his underachieving local team, improving both them and himself.
In fact, I realise now that this may be the only hockey movie I’ve ever seen, period. Paul Newman in SLAPSHOT? Nope. THE MIGHTY DUCKS? Somehow passed me by in my youth. THE CUTTING EDGE? No, and anyway that was figure skating. All that comes to mind is Van Damme’s SUDDEN DEATH and that doesn’t really have anything to do with the sport, it was just that by 1995 the ‘DIE HARD in a ...’ formula had been stretched so far it had reached ‘hockey stadium’. Other than that, we’re talking one scene from LETHAL WEAPON 3 and that SIMPSONS episode.
Also, it’s always ice hockey, never the regular type. Why is that? Does anyone even play the other version outside of school? It definitely pops up at the Olympics or whatever on TV ...
Anyway, I’m certainly not an expert on the sport, either onscreen or in real life. But from what I can tell, (ice) hockey should make good film material. Fast, high-scoring, and brutal: I have visons that every two minutes there has to be a crunching collision, often with players slammed against a sheet of perspex with faces contorted comically, or a full-on gloves-off fist fight.
Having now seen GOON: LAST OF THE ENFORCERS, it seems I wasn’t too far off the mark. One thing about which I had been ignorant was the concept of a hockey ‘enforcer’, AKA a ‘goon’. Low-skill, high-aggression, usually not scoring many but typically a cult hero, they lead the fighting – which if not officially encouraged is definitely indulged. I guess NHL 96 on the Sega Mega Drive wasn't so unrealistic, after all.
In football terms – the terms I understand best – there is an equivalent to the goon/enforcer: it’s known as being a ‘shithouse’. Examples include Sergio Ramos, Vinnie Jones, Scott Brown, Joey Barton and Diego Costa. Quite a diverse range of players qualify, and more euphemistic terms are usually used, like ‘combative midfielder’ or ‘uncompromising defender’, but all shithouses have one thing in common: their employment of the game’s ‘dark arts’ make them hated by other teams’ fans and loved by their own.
And that’s certainly true of Seann William Scott’s protagonist in LAST ENFORCER, who at the start of the movie is not only made captain but is honoured with the squad number 69, which will clearly always be the most hilarious number, or at least as far as comedy screenwriters are concerned. But after he’s beaten to a pulp on the ice by rival Wyatt Russell, he jacks the game in to go work in insurance, which according to the movies is the lowest and most humiliating industry of all (except maybe teaching or working for the IRS). When Russell goes on to replace him in the team, Scott turns to Liev Schreiber’s grizzled veteran and he trains him towards a comeback. Oh, and his wife Alison Pill is pregnant, so there's a personal life subplot in there as well.
The whole thing is fitfully amusing to an acceptable degree, even if I got the impression that there’s a vein of Canadian humour running through that I'm unable to grasp, particularly in the TV sports channel segments that seem to be one long baffling in-joke.
That the film succeeds is mostly due to the lead actor and his goofy, doofus appeal. Scott used his Stifler-in-AMERICAN-PIE momentum to star or cameo in practically every lowbrow comedy of the early ’00s. This scattergun approach yielded predictably mixed results, but I always liked him. This despite the unnecessarily convoluted moniker: did he really need the middle part, when there was a perfectly concise and alliterative superhero identity-sounding name right there? And was the extra ‘n’ strictly necessary? Did he want to avoid an imbalance with the double ‘t’ that comes at the end?
Um, anyway, the MVP (as I think they say in hockey; they certainly say it in one of those sports) actually turns out to be Russell, who imbues his character with a tough guy/sensitive guy contradiction that is always amusingly off-balance and is chased with some oddball quirks, like an obsession with sunflower seeds. Kurt and Goldie should be proud; and if an ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK remake ever finally sees the light of day, there is no other choice for the new Snake Plissken.
After co-starring in and co-writing the first film, Jay Baruchel is
promoted to director this time. He’s
always been one of the lesser known of ‘Team Apatow’, only really getting the spotlight
as the kind-of protagonist in THIS IS THE END. He equips himself well in his
triple role here, delivering what is clearly a labour of skates-on-ice love,
and if you’re after an undemanding timewaster sports comedy, you could do much
worse.
Three stars out of five.
Valid use of the
word ‘last’? Despite the (hopefully) exaggerated
bloodshed that paints the ice red, there’s no sign that the enforcer tradition
is going anywhere.
What would a movie called FIRST
OF THE ENFORCERS be about? Popular opinion puts it as either Red Horner of
the Toronto Maple Leafs or John Ferguson, who played for the Montreal
Canadiens.
Previously: THE LAST BOY SCOUT
Next time: THE LAST AIRBENDER
Check out my books: Jonathanlastauthor.com
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