Film Review: The Family


Punctuated by scenes of cartoonish violence, The Family razes one sleepy corner of Normandy in its ham-fisted pursuit of big bangs and laughs, but it’s a far, desperate cry from the propulsive energy and intense emotions of Besson’s hit man thriller, Leon,.
The family in question comprises of Fred (Robert De Niro), his long-suffering wife Maggie (Michelle Pfeiffer) and their two children, 17-year-old Belle (Dianna Agron) and 14-year-old Warren (John D’Leo), who arrive at their new ramshackle home in the dead of night.
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Hide AdIt transpires that the exhausted quartet are the Manzonis from Brooklyn, who have been placed in witness protection under the supervision of FBI handler Robert Stansfield (Tommy Lee Jones) since snitching on fellow mobster Don Luchese (Stan Carp).
The problem is The Family pretends to be one thing - a giddy whirl of action, thriller and romance – but turns out to be something else entirely: an unholy mess.