Friday, August 15, 2025

RANSOM, KIND OF WONDERFUL

Opening in the Valley today at RoadHouse Cinemas in Scottsdale:

Highest 2 Lowest--In Spike Lee's latest, Denzel Washington feels very authentic as David King, a superstar music producer known as "the best ears in the business." You get the impression the performance may reflect a  showbiz type Washington has encountered more than once.

David is a reflexive glad-hander, smiling and chuckling and bantering, yet with a show of underlying gravity, easygoing yet earnest. He's a master of listening, or at least of looking like he's listening.

As the movie starts, David is maneuvering to buy back the record label he founded before it's taken over by a consortium that wants to make music with A.I. The early scenes have the feel of a glossy, glamorous show-business melodrama. But when David gets a call telling him his son has been kidnapped for ransom, the movie quietly downshifts into a thriller.

Then the story takes yet another, even more unsettling twist that puts it into the realm of a moral thriller (stop reading now if you don't want to know it). The kidnapper, it turns out, has napped the wrong kid; not David's son but the son of his beloved ex-con chauffeur and confidant Paul (Jeffrey Wright).

Just that quickly, David's sense of urgency to pay the multi-million-dollar ransom, with money otherwise slated for his business deal, simply evaporates. Eventually, David starts to grasp that not only is Paul's son's life at stake, so is own soul.

You may recognize the basic plot as that of Akira Kurosawa's High and Low (1963), of which this is a heavily embellished but unmistakable remake, with Washington in the Toshiro Mifune role. Time has shown that Lee attempting his own take on Kurosawa is not hubris; he's a master too.

Working from a script by Alex Fox, Lee keeps us on the edge of our seat even while he takes the time to explore character, and to use the New York locations for all they're worth. His approach is charged yet discursive, and the movie glides and swerves and rattles along like a subway ride, unpredictably but never incoherently, to a satisfying destination.

I well remember when Lee first showed up in American movies in the late '80s, and how brashly innovative his techniques seemed. He moved cinema forward. But here, as in his intriguing 2006 bank heist thriller Inside Man, his style seems old-school, loose, adaptable, almost classical.

Of course, none of this stylistic prowess would amount to much if Lee wasn't hugely abetted by Washington, Wright and the rest of the cast, including Ilfenesh Hadera as David's wife, Aubrey Joseph as his son, ASAP Rocky as a mysterious young rapper and John Douglas Thompson, Dean Winters and LaChanze as the cops. Also, Highest 2 Lowest is full of great songs and a driving, at times almost Riverdance-ish score by Howard Drossin. It's maybe the best soundtrack of the year, or possibly a close second to that of Sinners.

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