2013’s Assault on Wall Street tells the story of Jim Braxford (Dominic Purcell), a security guard who loses all of his money due to some bad investments that he had no control over and whose wife, Rosie (Erin Karpluk), kills herself rather than continue her expensive medical treatments. Jim snaps and, after listening to a bunch of angry people on MSNBC, he decides to take violent vengeance on Wall Street, targeting brokers and CEOs and ultimately launching an all-out assault on a firm owned by the cartoonishly evil Jeremy Stancroft (John Heard).
Full of anti-capitalist rhetoric and heavy-handed plot developments, Assault on Wall Street finds director Uwe Boll in a political mood. Because the film deals with economic anxiety to which everyone can relate, this film is slightly more effective than Boll’s usual films but that still doesn’t mean that it’s particularly good. It’s one of those films that takes forever to get where it’s going and the film also suffers due to Boll’s confounding decision to cast Dominic Purcell in the lead role. The blank-eyed, flat-voice Purcell gives such a spectacularly dull performance that one wonders if he was constructed out of charisma anti-matter. It doesn’t help that Purcell’s three best friends are played Edward Furlong, Michael Pare, and Keith David, all of whom come across like they would have been a better pick for the lead role.
The film ends with a spate of violence that I remember that I found to be a bit shocking when I first saw the film on cable in 2013. Of course, today, such violence has been normalized and is often celebrated on social media. I imagine that members of the creepy Luigi death cult would probably claim that Jim Braxford didn’t go far enough in his murder spree.
Two of my favorites, Eric Roberts and Lochlyn Munro, have supporting roles in this film. Munro is Jim’s broker, who makes the mistake of complaining about how he had to cancel his planned vacation to Barbados as a result of the economic meltdown. Roberts plays the lawyer who agrees to help Jim get justice but who ultimately proves to be no help at all. Both of them are memorable in their small roles, which once again leaves us to wonder why, with all the talent available, Uwe Boll apparently decided to make Dominic Purcell his muse. That was a bad investment.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
- Star 80 (1983)
- Runaway Train (1985)
- Blood Red (1989)
- The Ambulance (1990)
- The Lost Capone (1990)
- Love, Cheat, & Steal (1993)
- Voyage (1993)
- Love Is A Gun (1994)
- Sensation (1994)
- Dark Angel (1996)
- Doctor Who (1996)
- Most Wanted (1997)
- Mercy Streets (2000)
- Raptor (2001)
- Rough Air: Danger on Flight 534 (2001)
- Wolves of Wall Street (2002)
- Mr. Brightside (2004)
- Six: The Mark Unleased (2004)
- Hey You (2006)
- Amazing Racer (2009)
- In The Blink of an Eye (2009)
- Bed & Breakfast (2010)
- Enemies Among Us (2010)
- The Expendables (2010)
- Sharktopus (2010)
- Beyond The Trophy (2012)
- The Dead Want Women (2012)
- Deadline (2012)
- The Mark (2012)
- Miss Atomic Bomb (2012)
- Bonnie And Clyde: Justified (2013)
- Lovelace (2013)
- The Mark: Redemption (2013)
- The Perfect Summer (2013)
- Self-Storage (2013)
- A Talking Cat!?! (2013)
- This Is Our Time (2013)
- Inherent Vice (2014)
- Road to the Open (2014)
- Rumors of War (2014)
- Amityville Death House (2015)
- Deadly Sanctuary (2015)
- A Fatal Obsession (2015)
- Las Vegas Story (2015)
- Stalked By My Doctor (2015)
- Enemy Within (2016)
- Joker’s Poltergeist (2016)
- Prayer Never Fails (2016)
- Stalked By My Doctor: The Return (2016)
- The Wrong Roommate (2016)
- Dark Image (2017)
- Black Wake (2018)
- Frank and Ava (2018)
- Stalked By My Doctor: Patient’s Revenge (2018)
- Clinton Island (2019)
- Monster Island (2019)
- The Reliant (2019)
- The Savant (2019)
- Seven Deadly Sins (2019)
- Stalked By My Doctor: A Sleepwalker’s Nightmare (2019)
- The Wrong Mommy (2019)
- Exodus of a Prodigal Son (2020)
- Free Lunch Express (2020)
- Her Deadly Groom (2020)
- Top Gunner (2020)
- Deadly Nightshade (2021)
- The Elevator (2021)
- Just What The Doctor Ordered (2021)
- Killer Advice (2021)
- Night Night (2021)
- The Poltergeist Diaries (2021)
- The Rebels of PT-218 (2021)
- A Town Called Parable (2021)
- Bleach (2022)
- My Dinner With Eric (2022)
- D.C. Down (2023)
- Aftermath (2024)
- Bad Substitute (2024)
- Devil’s Knight (2024)
- The Wrong Life Coach (2024)
- When It Rains In L.A. (2025
Uwe Boll doesn’t get the credit he deserves….as perhaps the single worst film Director of all time. That said, I admire any one who makes a film, no matter the quality – since that is subjective in many cases…he was certainly one of the most aggressive Directors of all time to be sure…
LikeLike
Pingback: Music Video of the Day: We Belong Together (2005, dir by Brett Ratner) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: 69 Parts (dir by Ari Taub) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Border Blues (dir by Rodion Nahapetov) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Depth Charge (dir by Terrence O’Hara) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Best of the Best (dir by Bob Radler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Best of the Best II (dir by Bob Radler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Megaboa (dir by Mario N. Bonassin) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Hunting Season (dir by Eduardo Castrillo) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Bigfoot vs D.B. Cooper (dir by David DeCoteau) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Doc Holliday’s Revenge (dir by David DeCoteau) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Film: Dawn (dir by Nicholas Ryan) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: The Demonic Dead (dir by Rick Vargas) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Sink Hole (dir by Scott Wheeler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Sink Hole (dir by Scott Wheeler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: The Chaos Experiment (dir by Philippe Martinez) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: The Rideshare Killer (dir by Ashley Scott Meyers) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Red Prophecies (dir by Rodney James Hewitt and Christopher Gosch) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: To Heal A Nation (dir by Michael Pressman) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: Retro Television Review: The American Short Story #11: Paul’s Case | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: Sorority Slaughterhouse (dir by David DeCoteau) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: Insane Like Me? (dir by Chip Joslin) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: 2 Bedroom 1 Bath (dir by Stanley Yung) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: Space Sharks (dir by Dustin Ferguson) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: October True Crime: The Company We Keep (dir by Jeff Edelstein) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: October Positivity: Revelation Road: The Beginning of the End (dir by Gabriel Sabloff) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: October Positivity: Revelation Road 2: The Sea of Glass and Fire (dir by Gabriel Sabloff) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: 616 Wilford Lane (dir by Dante Yore) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: An Eric Roberts Holiday Film Review: So This Is Christmas (dir by Richard Foster) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: An Eric Roberts Holiday Film Review: A Karate Christmas Miracle (dir by Julie Kimmel) | Through the Shattered Lens