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No Good Deed In No Good Deed , a former lawyer who specialized in cases of violence against women unwittingly welcomes into her home an escaped convict with… No Good Deed In No Good Deed , a former lawyer who specialized in cases of violence against women unwittingly welcomes into her home an escaped convict with… 2014-09-12 PG-13 PT84M Thriller Leslie Bibb Kate del Castillo Idris Elba Taraji P. Henson Screen Gems Inc. Sony Pictures Entertainment
Movie Review

No Good Deed (2014)

MPAA Rating: PG-13
Image credit: Quantrell Colbert

Taraji P. Henson and Idris Elba in No Good Deed

EW's GRADE
C

Details Release Date: Sep 12, 2014; Rated: PG-13; Length: 84 Minutes; Genre: Thriller; With: Leslie Bibb, Kate del Castillo, Idris Elba and Taraji P. Henson; Distributors: Screen Gems Inc. and Sony Pictures Entertainment

In No Good Deed, a former lawyer who specialized in cases of violence against women unwittingly welcomes into her home an escaped convict with a history of terrorizing female victims. By the time this ex-con, named Colin (Idris Elba), charms his way into Terri's (Taraji P. Henson) Pottery Barn catalog of a home, the audience is already well aware of his brutality. On the eve of his parole hearing at the beginning of the movie, a Tennessee newscaster informs us that he's basically the most notorious criminal in the country, suspected of abducting five women, but convicted of an unrelated manslaughter. He's denied parole, escapes soon after, and heads to Georgia to take care of some business, which ultimately puts him on Terri's doorstep. Why isn't she hip to the news that there's a criminal on the loose just one state away? Beats us.

Still, there's an intriguing premise buried in there that could have resulted in a smart look inside the mind of a malignant narcissist (which, the movie reminds us over and over again, was Jeffrey Dahmer's diagnosis too). But No Good Deed chooses instead to operate as a fairly conventional home-invasion thriller. Much of the indulgent second act consists of making us wait—sometimes in true suspense, but mostly in boredom—for Terri to figure out that this hulking man is actually a psychopath. That's not to say Deed isn't gripping at times, and the fact that Henson's character has to protect not only herself but an infant and kid too adds some interesting stakes to the final showdown. But with performers as strong as Henson and Elba, and the guidance of director Sam Miller, who's worked with Elba in a handful of Luther episodes, it should have yielded more. The trite third act reveal only further sours the wasted potential. C

Originally posted Sep 12, 2014 Published in issue #1325-1326 Aug 29, 2014 Order article reprints
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Weekend of Oct 19 Box Office Source: Rentrak Corp.
Rank Title Weekend Gross* Weeks on Chart Cume. Gross* EW Grade
1.
Fury
Sony
$23.5 1 $23.5 C+
2.
Gone Girl
Fox
$17.8 3 $107.1 A
3. $17.0 1 $17.0 A-
4. $12.0 2 $36.9 B
5.
The Best of Me
Relativity
$10.2 1 $10.2 D
6.
Dracula Untold
Universal
$9.9 2 $40.7 C
7.
The Judge
Warner Bros.
$7.9 2 $26.8 B
8.
Annabelle
Warner Bros.
$7.9 3 $74.1 F
9. $5.4 4 $89.2 D
10. $4.5 5 $90.8 B-
* in millions

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