Tin Soldiers has Jamie Foxx as the head of a former veterans group that has turned into a cult. That's a bad combination when you consider most of the members are trained in combat. Among them is Scott Eastwood (or "Eastcrud" as he's been dubbed on the pod), who left the cult, and now is being recruited by Robert De Niro and John Leguizamo to infiltrate the cult and take them down. All is not what it seems though, and Eastcrud isn't sure who he can trust, but when he discovers his lover in the cult, Nora Arnezeder, whom he thought was dead, might be alive, he has a new purpose to get to the bottom of things--and throw De Niro in a bathtub--and take Foxx down.
If you've listened to our podcast episode, you know where I'm going with this. This thing is bonkers, it's an early 2000s MTV music video fever dream mixed with action sequences. In one moment we have Foxx singing a Disco-tinged 70s style soul song, another Eastwood is beating up De Niro, and De Niro's like "you don't have to humiliate me," reminding us that the guy who's supposed to be the hero in this film is beating up a man in his 80s. And as you start to anchor into something, like the action sequences, the fever dream aspect of the film kicks back in, and I'm waiting for Carson Daly to cut in and tell us what the next song on the countdown is. But then you have Foxx leaning into the bonkerness, giving us this performance that elevates the proceedings above the modern DTV dregs we're used to, which is supposed to be the whole idea behind casting stars like Foxx in these, but seldom happens. You're talking about an 86-minute runtime, and it is on Hulu, so I think it's worth seeing for Foxx's performance and the bonkerness, but I think I'm unique in that kind of mindset, so I wouldn't pick this for a movie night with people who may not see movies that way, because they may never let you pick the movie night movie again!
I wanted to start with Bob De Niro, because he's the most tagged of anyone in this, this being his seventh movie on the site. And while two of those were Wild Card posts back when I covered big screen films on Fridays (Machete and Righteous Kill)--two and a half depending on how you want to count The Irishman--he also has more movies like this than you'd expect, with this being the fourth DTV film after Freelancers, Killing Season, and Savage Salvation. When I started the site in 2007, I couldn't have imagined that I'd be reviewing any of his movies, but here we are, Travis Bickle, Jake La Motta, and James Conway is now playing a character who, even though it's a stunt double, is getting beaten up and dunked in a bathtub by Scott Eastwood. But he's interesting in that, unlike other names who once they go DTV, they don't go back, he seems to dabble in it, and is dabbling less now than he did in the 2010s. It would be like putting Meryl Streep in a Randall Scandal and having a scene where an actor like Kelly Greyson is beating her up and dunking her in a bathtub, but somehow we accept it with De Niro--and as you can imagine, I'm hoping for us to someday get some Streep Randall Scandals!
The standout, as I mentioned above, is Jamie Foxx. We often say "he got the assignment," but if there was an assignment, it was probably as vague and fever dream-ish as the rest of the film, so he just took what he got and ran with it on a level this movie didn't necessarily deserve. The monologues, the signing, the hair, it's all there, combined with this performance that's oozing menace and creepy cult leader all over the place. Unlike De Niro, this is our first time seeing Foxx here, and he generally doesn't drop down to this level, the closest being straight-to-Netflix movies that I may review, but like The Irishman, are made on big screen budgets that feel like they aren't in the spirit of what the site's about--if you remember, The Irishman was part of our 1000th post celebration. All this to say, if this ends up being the only time we see Foxx on the site, it was a memorable moment, as he's probably the main reason to see this.
That image below is what I mean about the fever dream combined with 2000s MTV music video aspect of the movie. It's not just Eastwood bathing in a freestanding bathtub (not the one he dunks De Niro in later in the film), but it's how it's set against this backdrop of corrugated iron and a wagon wheel leaning against a rustic rural house. I bet there were directors of Nickelback videos who saw this and were like "damn, why didn't we do this with Chad Kroeger!" The film was directed by Brad Furman, who not only has done his share of music videos, but also directed The Lincoln Lawyer, so he brings some credibility to the proceedings. It sounds like I'm making fun of the fever dream aspect, and maybe I am to some extent, but I also appreciate that he's doing something unique in the DTV movie space. Most of what we see now involves a scene at the beginning that's from the middle that gets us into the action, then we go back however many weeks and work back to that point, and the plot is designed to remind us every 10-15 minutes what's happening in case we've been looking at our phones. To do this fever dream thing, where even if you're paying attention you may not know what's going on, was audacious, and if I appreciate anything, it's audacious filmmaking.
Finally, this was shot in Greece, but didn't take place there. For example, one of the scenes was supposed to take place in San Diego. Greece and movies are in the news as I'm writing this, because Christopher Nolan's new Odyssey movie stars Lupita Nyong'o as Helen of Troy, which is upsetting a bunch of Conservative types--which doesn't make any sense on the face, because they're all about "no affirmative action, just hire the best person for the job," so why is it an issue if Nolan thinks she's the best for that role? Anyway, I guess the issue I have with the movie is, anyone can make a big epic version of The Odyssey with a bunch of big names and a big budget, to me what would be truly inspirational would be to shoot it in Greece, but have it take place in San Diego like the scene in this movie does. Like maybe Odie needs to get to San Diego from LA, and at one point he's lured into an In-N-Out by sirens through the promise of a Double-Double Animal Style? I guess this is why I find enjoyment out of a movie like this, when I'm telling Christopher Nolan I'm fine with him casting whoever he wants as Helen of Troy, but I think his film should be shot in Greece but take place in Southern California with In-N-Out Burger product placement.
And with that, let's wrap this up. You can get this included with your Hulu subscription, and at 86 minutes I think it's worth it, if for Foxx's performance alone. That said, after reading the paragraph above and seeing what my idea was for an Odyssey adaptation, you might be questioning my tastes, and I think that's fair. Also make sure you check out the podcast episode Ty and I did on this, number 254 in the archives.
For more info: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt20258920/
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