Paul Walker's Penultimate Movie Reminds Us Why We'll Miss Paul Walker



via BuzzFeed

Here’s everything you need to know about the action film Brick Mansions , the second-to-last movie the late actor made, which hits theaters on Friday.



Relativity Media


We're running out of Paul Walker movies. Brick Mansions, directed by Camille Delamarre and set in a dystopian Detroit where the roughest neighborhood's been walled up from the rest of the city, is the last feature the late actor completed — he died in the midst of shooting Fast & Furious 7, which will see his brothers come in to complete the film.


Though Brick Mansions is ludicrous and doesn't make a lick of sense, it's still fun, and more than that, it's a reminder of the type of role Walker has always done so well. Here's everything you need to know about the actor's penultimate movie.


It's a remake of a French movie inspired by real unrest.


It's a remake of a French movie inspired by real unrest.


Luc Besson wrote and produced both the 2004 French action film District B13 and its remake Brick Mansions. But the difference between the remake and the original is that the latter was set in a near-future version of one of the troubled suburbs outside Paris, which are known for their unrest and high levels of unemployment and poverty, and which have been home to riots. In District B13, which takes place in the now not-so-futuristic year of 2013, the most crime-ridden neighborhood has been walled off, with police checkpoints preventing anyone from leaving.


Brick Mansions moves the action to 2018 Detroit, where housing projects have been similarly sealed off and are dominated by drug-dealing gangsters, the chief of them being Tremaine (RZA). The bankrupt city, with its areas of desolation and its difficulties maintaining services, makes a decent Americanized fit for the story's broad social themes, though the remake mainly pays them lip service. And a plotline about the mayor wanting to get rid of Brick Mansions (which is also the name of the projects) in order to build a new luxury development reads as strange — Detroit doesn't exactly seem short on available real estate. Even the movie, maybe due to budget limitations, feels underpopulated.


District B13: Magnolia Home Entertainment


It involves parkour.


It involves parkour.


Both District B13 and Brick Mansions star David Belle, who is one of the founders of parkour, the holistic movement-centric training discipline that he and two others developed from military obstacle course training, and that's since turned up in bigger movies like Casino Royale and Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows.


He's not the world's most naturally charismatic actor, but he is a man who, reprising his first leading role after a decade, still seems unencumbered by things like gravity, leaping up the sides of buildings and vaulting over stairwells, doing backflips over baddies and bouncing off walls with incredible athleticism. Belle is apparently indestructible and ageless, and even manages to counter some of Brick Mansions' hyperactive editing, in which no shot seems to run longer than half a second.


In the original film, Belle was partnered with fellow parkour practitioner and stuntman Cyril Raffaelli. But in the remake, in which he plays Lino, Belle is paired with Paul Walker, who isn't really one for using the world as his own personal obstacle course. Walker gets his own style of action sequence, automotive and otherwise, but the best scene in both the original and the remake is the opening one in which Belle first shows off his skills by eluding dozens of guys sent to take him down.


Brick Mansions: Relativity Media / Via giphy.com




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