Movie Review: Peppermint
Peppermint ** ½ / *****
Directed by: Pierre Morel.
Written by: Chad St. John.
Starring: Jennifer Garner (Riley), John Gallagher Jr. (Detective Stan Carmichael), John Ortiz (Detective Moises Beltran), Juan Pablo Raba (Diego Garcia), Annie Ilonzeh (FBI Agent Lisa Inman), Jeff Hephner (Chris North), Cailey Fleming (Carly), Eddie Shin (FBI Special Agent Li), Method Man (Narcotics Detective Barker), Tyson Ritter (Homeless Sam), Ian Casselberry (Cortez), Richard Cabral (Salazar), Johnny Ortiz (Torres), Michael Reventar (Ortega), Pell James (Peg), Jeff Harlan (Judge James Stephens),Kyla-Drew (Maria), Gustavo Quiroz (Jose), Michael Mosley (Henderson).
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In Peppermint, Jennifer Garner plays Riley North, a suburban wife and mother – not from the rich part of town, but certainly not poor. She works in a bank – her husband is a mechanic, and they have a beautiful young daughter. Her main problems are dealing with bitchy fellow moms and working too long hours. Her husband wants them to get ahead – and briefly considers teaming up with a friend to rob a drug dealer – he doesn’t go through with it, but word leaks anyway, and that drug dealer, Diego Garcia (Juan Pablo Raba) wants to make an example of him. A drive-by shooting ends with both her husband and daughter dead. And when the system fails her – corrupt cops, corrupt lawyers, corrupt judges, etc. – Riley disappears for five years – but when she comes back, she does so with a vengeance. And anyone who had anything to do with her family’s death is going to pay.
Jennifer Garner is well cast in this role. She has the ability to look soft and fragile enough in the beginning to get you on your side, but is convincing as an ass-kicker as well. The movie doesn’t show that transition – that would be the hard part – but in the two veins she has to play, she does it well enough. She’s the only one with a real character to play here – everyone else is a symbol or a caricature, or else are used by the movie to try and fool us as the movie goes along - it doesn’t really work, because we don’t really care about the two cops – played by John Gallagher Jr. and John Ortiz), but they make the effort. As for the various Mexican drug dealers, they aren’t given anything to play, other than being menacing – and to be honest, they don’t do that very well.
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