
Vengeance: Stetsons, Frito pies and ... murder?
Vengeance is the kind of movie title you'd typically associate with Liam Neeson, who's ironically made headlining revenge-fuelled takedowns his "very particular set of skills", thrown into deadly scenarios and forced to exact street justice to rescue someone near and dear through whatever means necessary.
But in Vengeance, it's refreshing for our steely-eyed hero's metallic weapons to consist of a ballpoint pen and digital recorder. A dish best served cold, Vengeance is more cerebral, thought-provoking and even heartwarming in the way it peels back the layers of homegrown "Whataburger" logic to discover what it means to be American.
While this satirical fish-out-of-water sideshow is technically more Borat than Liam Neeson, Vengeance is actually stuck somewhere in the middle with BJ Novak as our intrepid guide. It's kind of funny to think of anyone from the cast of The Office starring in a film about tracking down a murderer in the heart of Texas. Somehow Novak makes this detour entirely plausible, casting himself in the lead role as journalist and podcaster Ben Manalowitz.

Headlining his very own breakthrough crime mystery caper, he's ably supported by the handsome Boyd Holbrook, who brings some Liam Neeson edge thanks to his roles in Run All Night and A Walk Among the Tombstones. Just as unexpected as Novak is Ashton Kutcher in a stetson, whose uncharacteristic key supporting performance adds depth and soul.
Starting with an out-of-the-blue phone call to get Ben to an ex's funeral in Texas, his next big story idea evolves along with his character. Taken in by an average yet welcoming Texan family, his immersion into their seemingly unambitious and backward way of life leads to self-reflection and personal revelation. A vicarious journey of self-discovery, Ben's quest for achievement becomes more altruistic in spite of mirages and roadblocks. Deliberately slow-boiling, Vengeance is an entertaining caper of strong contrasts and a social commentary on modern values, metanarratives, perspective, family and free will.

Taking on a similar vibration to While We're Young in its dissection of the here and now, Vengeance is also reminiscent of biographical interview drama, The End of the Tour.
Novak's script is hauntingly relevant, enough to warrant a second viewing with subtitles, capturing the soul-searching undercurrent of Noah Baumbach's generational comedy drama, While We're Young. Then, the journalistic endeavour, offbeat comedy, indie spirit and free-range interview technique recalls the sharp wit, organic dialogue and slow-creeping intimacy of The End of the Tour.

As writer, producer, director and star, this is undoubtedly Novak's movie and a passion project. He was inspired by a poster with a similar title at a film festival, which spawned the counterpoint concept of his face headlining such a movie title. The self-aware and comical juxtaposition has traction, which is further enhanced by airdropping a New York City writer into the middle-of-nowhere Texas.
In a wretched walk on the wild side, Novak captures a similar western dynamic to the culture-shock doc The Boers at the End of the World. What's even more surprising is just how thoughtful Vengeance is in its social exploration - essentially using its New Yorker in Texas investigative podcast scenario to represent the blue versus red state undercurrent and prickly political identity war of American society.

Poking fun at ideologies and values for the sake of comedy, the cross-section of characters break type just as readily, offering homegrown wisdom and a degree of high-minded philosophical complexity to this docudrama type caper. Novak uses the fish-out-of-water scenario and timely dialogue to pick at the seams of American gun, drug and diet culture without becoming preachy.
Cleverly taken from the perspective of a podcast series in the making, Novak finds a good balance between contemplative moments and colourful slice-of-life visuals. He makes direct reference to Richard Linklater, the Texan auteur behind films such as Dazed and Confused, Before Sunrise and Boyhood, who he takes inspiration from in crafting Vengeance. Incorporating a similar bittersweet, thoughtful and life-like flow to create a sense of reality, the rich free-flowing dialogue reinforces the Linklater connection.
Vengeance has strong influences but BJ Novak's smart script, high contrasts, inspired vision and sensitive direction drive it home. Funny, thought-provoking and suspenseful, it leans on clear-eyed performances, unpredictable storytelling and an intriguing docudrama style investigation against the dusty backdrop of the "we don't call 9-1-1" Lone Star State.
More like this

Daudi Anguka on Mizani, Organ Trafficking and Why the Coast Is Finally Taking Centre Stage in Kenya's Film Industry
Award-winning filmmaker Daudi Anguka opens up about his first Showmax original, tackling organ trafficking and the rise of Kenyan coastal cinema.

How M3GAN 2.0 blurred the lines between human and AI
Allison Williams, Ivanna Sakhno and M3GAN 2.0 writer-creator Gerard Johnstone talk about how the back-and-forth between humans, robots, and AI turned creepy on set.

M3GAN 2.0 (2025)
Killer doll M3GAN is resurrected to face a new threat: Amelia, a military-grade robot created using M3GAN's technology.

The Naked Gun (2025)
In this slapstick comedy reboot, Frank Drebin Jr follows in his father's footsteps to prevent the closure of Police Squad.
Mizani S1
From the award-winning director of Mvera and Pete comes a searing new series set in the dark underbelly of Kenya’s coastal city.

Jurassic World: Rebirth (2025)
Scarlett Johansson leads a stellar cast in the seventh instalment in the iconic dinosaur franchise, about a team that needs to extract dinosaur DNA.

I Love LA S1
Toxic friendships are taken to a whole new level in this off-the-wall comedy, as a co-dependent friend group navigates life and love in Los Angeles.

Ellah Maina spills on Showmax dramedy, Adam to Eve
Kalasha Award winner Ellah Maina opens up about her role in Showmax’s Adam to Eve, her acting journey and gender expectations.
Bodies Bodies Bodies: Deadly laughs
Hands Up: Diamonds, damsels, dilemmas and duty
More enthralling movies to stream

Daudi Anguka on Mizani, Organ Trafficking and Why the Coast Is Finally Taking Centre Stage in Kenya's Film Industry
Award-winning filmmaker Daudi Anguka opens up about his first Showmax original, tackling organ trafficking and the rise of Kenyan coastal cinema.

Landman S1-2
Taylor Sheridan's Landman stars Billy Bob Thornton. In the heart of Texas, roughnecks and billionaires collide in the get-rich-quick oil industry.

How M3GAN 2.0 blurred the lines between human and AI
Allison Williams, Ivanna Sakhno and M3GAN 2.0 writer-creator Gerard Johnstone talk about how the back-and-forth between humans, robots, and AI turned creepy on set.

Christall dishes on The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip
Christall Kay on the drama of The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa, and what it was like to reunite with Evodia. All episodes on Showmax.
Latest Stories

Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning’s South African stunts
%2520(1)-1.jpg&w=2560&q=80)
Lenana Kariba speaks on returning for Single Kiasi Season 4
Veteran actor Helen Keli spills on playing Delilah on Single Kiasi S4

From Poverty to Purpose: The Redemption of Emmanuel Adebayor: Why Saving Lives Trumps Scoring Goals

Christall on The Ultimate Girls Trip, Evodia and more

Manchester City vs Liverpool: The Rivalry Reignites

What to watch on Showmax in Kenya in November 2025

Annie Mthembu opens up about The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip Africa

Can LFC rediscover the form that saw them crowned champions?

Conor Bradley on Liverpool's difficult run and the path back

Must-watch trailer: The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa

Creating The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

From The Office to The Paper

Dexter's deadly to-do list in Dexter: Resurrection

Bafana Bafana composed for Durban showdown against Zimbabwe

Arsenal and Liverpool early front-runners ahead of Premier League international break

Inside spy movie Black Bag

The Premier League canvas: a Saturday masterpiece painted in blue and red

What to watch on Showmax in Kenya in October 2025
Godfrey Odhiambo on Reckless, his career, and the evolution of Kenyan film

The clash of the new number 9s: Gyökeres vs Woltemade

June Squibb wins Best Actress award at age 95 for Thelma

Red vs Blue: Showmax Premier League serves up a blockbuster weekend

Blockbuster Premier League weekend: Red vs Blue







