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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Steel Toes (David Gow and
Mark Adam)
Adapted from the play of the same name, screenwriter/playwright
David Gow takes his work to the
screen, plucking stunning and impacting performances
from Oscar nominee David Strathairn
("Good Night and Good Luck"), playing
the Jewish lawyer, Daniel Dunkleman,
who has been appointed to represent a Neo-Nazi
racist, Michael Downey, played
Andrew Walker (“The Score,” “Wicked
Minds”).
A native of Montreal, Quebec where the movie
was filmed, Walker reflects the many facets of
this complex character: a young man who in a fit
of over-the-top anger and rage, attacks an East
Indian immigrant repeatedly after the fry cook
mistakenly tosses water on Downey, who happens
to be standing in a dark alley with his fiancé.
The immigrant eventually dies in intensive care,
but not before he leaves his last words on paper,
affecting Downey in ways he never thought possible.
It is a twist of fate that Dunkleman, a predictable
enemy of a skinhead like Downey, decides to take
on this case of defending what again should be
a devil in the eyes of his race and heritage.
In the way that these two are in opposition of
each other, it is these differences that cause
them both to take a deep and sometimes painful
look at who they really are.
There is no way that Downey can avoid his time
behind bars, but Dunkleman believes that there
is a way, albeit unorthodox, to potentially lower
the sentence. Turning the tables, Dunkleman gives
Downey the task of creating the case. This requires
that Downey get down to the core of why the murder
took place. This is the heart of "Steel Toes,"
which is charged with emotional turmoil that reaches
into so many facets of the human condition, lifting
and feeling the complex fabric that life weaves.
For Dunkleman, he has to deal with the pressures
this case has brought into his personal life,
but turns to the memory of his father and the
guidance he provided his son. And within the dark,
cold walls of prison, Downey has no choice but
to look at his life up to now and how he ended
up where he did. His only strength lies within
himself, and instead of turning to the heritage
of his upbringing as Dunkleman does, he in turn
has to reverse the conditioning he’s experienced
in the many meetings of the Arian brotherhood.
In the end, the shoes seem to be on the other
foot, as Downey has a great sense of his true
being and capabilities that stretch far beyond
that which he was before that fateful night, while
Dunkleman is finding it hard to cope with integrating
back to what his life was before the trail. This
is an affecting film, which takes a unique look
at the seemingly unending racial hatred that has
existed for hundreds of years, but a film that
gives hope that within everyone there lies a soul
that is free from hatred. It just needs a chance
to come to the surface.
I can’t say enough about how Walker transformed
himself in so many ways for this character. I
haven’t seen any of his other films, but
if his performance in Steel Toes is any indication
of his depth of skill and talent, he’s definitely
an actor to watch for in the future.
www.steeltoesthemovie.com
-Kim Owens, August 1, 2007
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