Taken 3
Starring: Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Forest Whitaker, Famke Janssen
Director: Olivier Megaton
Released: 9 January 2015 (U.S. Dates)
When ex-government operative Bryan Mills (Neeson) is framed for
murdering his ex-wife (Janssen) in L.A. he goes on the run, using his
particular set of skills to find the true killer and protect his
daughter… While the first film was a modern action classic, the second
was a flat rerun. This makes the mistake of rehiring the second film’s
director. It’s also a shame this goes the route of killing Bryan’s
almost-reconciled ex-wife, as he worked hard to keep her alive for the
entire second film. That being said, this is Neeson, the reining master
of the gruff action film (pocketing $20 million to return) and seeing
him going up against the LAPD and FBI ‘Fugitive’-style gives it a
different flavour. Critic reviews have been disappointing all round,
while the public generally view it as rubbish, but kinda fun rubbish. [Critics (via Rotten Tomatoes): 9%] [Public (via IMDB): 6.0] – MediocreStarring: Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Forest Whitaker, Famke Janssen
Director: Olivier Megaton
Released: 9 January 2015 (U.S. Dates)
Blackhat
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Viola Davis, Holt McCallany, Tang Wei
Director: Michael Mann
Released: 16 January 2015
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Viola Davis, Holt McCallany, Tang Wei
Director: Michael Mann
Released: 16 January 2015
When a hacker’s old code is used to infiltrate a prominent financial target, he is released from prison and offered a deal to work with the joint FBI/Chinese government task force tracking down the person responsible. But the guilty party is already causing chaos elsewhere, including shutting down the cooling facility at a nuclear power plant. This cat-and-mouse international heist-actioner travels to Chicago, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong and Jakarta. Unfortunately this is not the ‘Heat’ of cybercrime. Buff superhunk Chris Hemsworth is poorly cast as a master hacker. Director Michael Mann promised envelope-pushing camera-work, but it’s just his usual. And it sports character work even worse than ‘Public Enemies’ and ‘Miami Vice’. Hollywood just doesn’t do hacking well and this is further proof. Dull. [Critics: 34%] [Public: 5.4] – Mediocre
Wild Card
Starring: Jason Statham, Stanley Tucci, Sofia Vergara, Milo Ventimiglia, Jason Alexander
Director: Simon West
Released: 30 January 2015
A Las Vegas bodyguard with a gambling problem (Statham) helps an old friend get revenge on a sadistic thug (Ventimiglia) after she is beaten by him. He then finds out the thug is the son of a powerful mob boss (Tucci). Now he’s playing blackjack to win enough cash to leave Vegas for good, fast, but his plans may go awry… Remake of the so-so 1986 Burt Reynolds-starrer ‘Heat’. That was written by the legendary William Goldman, adapted from his novel, the man responsible for the likes of ‘Misery’, ‘The Princess Bride’ and ‘All the President’s Men’ but more recently ‘Dreamcatcher’. He’s writing the screenplay for this remake, his first production in 11 years. This has a decent cast too but it still looks interchangeable with Statham’s other very missable recent action outings: ‘Parker’, ‘Homefront’, ‘Safe’, and ‘The Mechanic’. Although this will lean more towards crime-drama, with only a handful of action scenes. The director worked with Statham on ‘The Expendables 2’ and ‘The Mechanic’. Reviews and public reaction has been poor. It’s for hardcore Statham fans only. [Critics: 27%] [Public: 5.6] – Mediocre
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