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Film

Film review: The Public

This film is a well-meaning dud, says Linda Marric

February 20, 2020 15:27
Emilio Estevez in The Public
1 min read

A group of homeless people occupy Cincinnati’s public library to shelter from the bitter cold in this deeply flawed but well-meaning social drama based on true events. Written, directed by and starring Emilio Estevez, The Public presents a heartening story of triumph of good over evil, but sadly lacks the gravitas one would usually expect from these types of stories.

Estevez plays Stuart, a once homeless librarian who knows first-hand what it’s like to roam the streets of Cincinnati during the brutal Midwestern winter. He finds himself in a tight spot when a group of male homeless patrons led by Jackson (an impressive performance courtesy of The Wire’s Michael K. Williams) stage an impromptu sit-in at the public library when emergency shelters are found to be at full capacity.

Meanwhile, still reeling from an earlier confrontation with overzealous district attorney Josh Davis (a hilariously smarmy Christian Slater) over an incident at the library, Stuart decides to join the men in their plight on a whim. What first began as a peaceful, occupy-style act of civil disobedience soon descends into a full-on confrontation with the city’s riot police which could see all the men arrested and thrown in jail.

Alec Baldwin stars as Detective Bill Ramstead, the sympathetic senior police detective tasked with negotiating with the occupiers, while Gabrielle Union is the implausibly dense local news reporter attempting to get to the bottom of the story.