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Sovereign review – Nick Offerman v Dennis Quaid in rage-fuelled anti-government crime drama

Based on a true story, Offerman plays an ‘sovereign citizen’ extremist pitted against Quaid’s police chief in this uncomfortably chilly dramaFor a film about rage, this is a rather chilly, uncomfortable drama. It’s inspired by the true-life story of Jerry and Joseph Kane, father and son anti-government extremists; Jerry was a self-proclaimed “sovereign citizen” who believed that the government was illegitimate and he could decide which laws to opt out of. He’s played here by Nick Offerman (Ron Swanson in Parks and Recreation), giving a vein-popping, fist-clenchingly believable performance. We see Jerry’s boiling inferno through the eyes of his son Joe (Jacob Tremblay), a quiet, thoughtful teenager urged by his dad to be an independent thinker (so long as he thinks the same as Jerry).It is Arkansas, 2010. Sixteen-year-old Joe opens the door to a sheriff handing him an eviction notice; his dad is behind on the mortgage payments. Even when he has the money, Jerry won’t pay the bank on principle. He’s a minor celebrity, a regular on right-wing radio stations, travelling the midwest in a white suit like a cheap preacher giving seminars on how to avoid mortgage foreclosures (a hat gets passed around at the end for donations). Continue reading...

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