
A temperamental, egotistical, British ex-con with a soft side for the  daughter he left behind, Jude Law is magnetic as the title character in  "Dom Hemingway," an amusing tale of vengeance, debauchery and  redemption told stylishly by writer-director Richard Shepard.
Dom  is introduced shirtless while delivering a verbose rant about his  genitalia, which he likens to titanium, a Renoir or Picasso painting, a  Nobel Prize winner, a cheetah, lightening and more. Few outrageous  comparisons are spared.
His speech could be seen as a pathetic  attempt at a pick-up technique, except he's so puffed up. It's clear he  could care less whether anyone agrees with him or not — and his delusion  is hilarious. His monologue sets the outlandish tone for the film,  where Dom, a safecracker, believes he's irresistible and indestructible.
Fresh  out of prison after serving 12 years, so reads the first of many  chapter cards, Dom is more than ready to make up for lost time. After  binging on booze, cocaine and hookers, he and his partner-in-crime,  Dickie Black (an amusingly dry Richard E. Grant), head to the lavish  home of his boss, Mr. Fontaine (the equally charming and ruthless Demian  Bichir). Dom refused to rat out the crime boss and he's come to collect  for his good deed. But before he can walk away with his hefty gift, a  brush with death — effectively displayed in slow motion — leaves him  empty-handed.
Broke, bloody and liquored up, Dom shows up at his  daughter's doorstep hoping she'll welcome him with open arms. But Evelyn  (Emilia Clarke of "Game of Thrones" as a redhead), now living with her  significant other and their son, is less than impressed with her father.  And so begins his quest to win back her affection, while dipping back  into a life of crime to try to make a bit of change. Luckily, he's still  an expert when it comes to opening safes.
Dom is one of Law's  richest roles yet. He packed on an extra 20 pounds and rocked thick  lamb-chop sideburns for this one. He's brazenly comical, absurdly grimy  and believably brawny. But at times, his Dom is ridiculously  unsympathetic. We're with him when he bloodies the face of a man who  romanced his wife during his jail sentence. But when we discover that  man cared for her as she died of cancer, it's impossible to continue to  applaud his assault.
As Dom is unable to piece his life back  together, especially where Evelyn is concerned, his snarling arrogance  subsides and he begins to succeed at getting us to feel sorry for him.  We also take cues from his adorable grandson (Jordan A. Nash), who seems  content just sitting next to Dom.
The same writer-director behind  the crime comedy "The Matador," Shepard writes with rousing wit, but  occasional scenes tend to drag and feel excessive. Still, he's at his  best when giving Dom lines like, "I only use a gun to hold up a place.Or threaten someone.Or rob 'em.Or pistol whip 'em.Or scare 'em. But no, no hunting."
It's  the film's humor that also makes Dom likable. Many of the blows to his  ego are due to his droll naivety. But it's a good look for Law, who  checks his pretty boy image at the door to give one of his grittiest  performances yet.