'The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day' review

More overblown shootouts and hackneyed clichés: Lord have mercy

By Alexis L. Loinaz

Metromix
October 29, 2009

 
Critic's Rating:
1 1/2

'The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day' review
Norman Reedus and Sean Patrick Flanery (Credit: Apparition )
Photos:
(L-R) Norman Reedus as Murphy MacManus and Sean Patrick Flanery as Connor MacManus in "Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day." (L-R) Sean Patrick Flanery as Connor MacManus, Billy Connolly as Noah MacManus, Norman Reedus as Murphy MacManus and Clifton Collins Jr. as Romeo in "Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day." (L-R) Julie Benz as Eunice Bloom and Clifton Collins Jr. as Romeo in "Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day." Writer-director Troy Duffy on the set of "Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day."
Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day
Cast:
Sean Patrick Flanery -
Connor MacManus
Norman Reedus -
Murphy MacManus
Judd Nelson -
Concezio Yakavetta
Billy Connolly -
Noah 'Il Duce' MacManus
Clifton Collins -
Romeo
See full cast
Director:
Troy Duffy
Genre:
Action
Official Movie Web Site:
http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/boondocksaints2/
Overall User Rating:
5 (1 rating)
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Ten years after wiping out Boston's mafia bosses, vigilante twins turned local heroes Connor (Sean Patrick Flanery) and Murphy (Norman Reedus) have gone into hiding on a sheep farm in Ireland. When news breaks that a Boston priest was killed by someone impersonating the twins, the boys ditch the Bo Peep life for a gun-crazy homecoming to avenge the priest's murder. They also like to spout religious mumbo-jumbo before killing people, and look smashing in slow-mo shootouts.

The buzz:
There's no shortage of rabid fans of the original "Boondock Saints," which was released for only two weeks in 1999 in a handful of theaters, but snowballed into a cult hit on video. Apparently, it has inspired drinking games and tattoos of the stars' mugs. It was also the catalyst for a contentious documentary about "Boondock" director Troy Duffy called "Overnight," which depicted him as an egomaniacal boozer.

The verdict: Hey guys, God wants those saint permits back, pronto. Like its predecessor, "Boondock" 2.0 thinks it's way cooler than it looks and more badass than it really is. Duffy revels in unleashing sequence after sequence of operatic shootouts and oooh-wow action stunts (really, boys, must you do front flips when making an entrance?). But what it all amounts to is a sludge of hackneyed clichés, from goofy police sidekicks to a femme fatale FBI investigator (Julie Benz from "Dexter") to hellfire-and-brimstone choir music. The tone is certainly darker than the original's—it is, after all, a revenge story—yet "Boondock" tries so hard to canonize its saints as legit action heroes that all those put-on sneers become more camp that cult. The devoted can slap the word "cult" all they want onto "Boondock Saints," but that doesn't change the fact that it's just a B-movie in need of some divine intervention.

Did you know?
The original "Boondock Saints" script was snapped up by Harvey Weinstein at Miramax, who reportedly canned the project after a casting dispute.

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