Look, I see a daggone lot of movies -- 200 a year, I reckon --
so it’s pretty hard to impress me. I’m the guy who yawns at a 20-second piece
of CGI that cost $5 million and took a team of computer animators six months to
create. But there were parts of “Atomic Blonde” where I had to scoop my jaw off
the sticky floor of the theater.
Essentially the first imitator in the “John Wick” mold, this
spy action/thriller combines unbelievable kick-butt stunt sequences with a
whole lot of intrigue and double crosses. Charlize Theron plays Lorraine
Broughton, a British MI6 agent sent into the rat’s nest of Berlin on the eve of
the Wall coming down in 1989.
The plot is a largely forgettable dance through the usual
spy movie tropes: enemies, allies, those lying somewhere in between, all sides
playing the long game of leverage, with the threat of a double agent and a
MacGuffin-esque “list” that could bring the whole order tumbling down.
What sets “Blonde” apart are the in-your-face stunts.
Director David Leitch is a rookie behind the camera but a veteran stunt
coordinator -- much the same as "Wick" -- and he shows an audacious verve that kicks the usual hand-to-hand
combat scenes to the next level.
The high point is a sequence on a flight of stairs that
segues from one group of opponents to the next, with the camera following
Broughton every step of the way. She gets thrown down a flight, the camera
tumbles right along with her. And Leitch uses minimal cutting, so we get to see
the whole thing play out from beginning to end, as the combatants grow battered
and exhausted.
Theron proves an able physical presence, completely
believable as someone who could take on her all-male gallery of adversaries.
She also brings subtle acting chops to the connective scenes, lending Broughton
a haunted quality -- a deceiver and killer who flings herself into the life
she’s chosen, but doesn’t enjoy it.
James McAvoy plays David Percival, a fellow Brit agent who
acts as her sneering host, helper and foil. He’s been stationed in East Berlin for a
decade, carving out an identity as a black market dealer in Western goods and
information. Percival knows everyone, has all the angles covered, is familiar with
the back ways and hidden passages. What’s unclear is where his true loyalties
lie.
Based on the graphic novel, “The Coldest City” by Antony
Johnston and Sam Hart, the screenplay by Kurt Johnstad (“300”) is long on too-cool mood
and punk imagery. What people say isn’t nearly as important as how and why they
are saying it.
It seems a Soviet intelligence agent code-named Spyglass
(Eddie Marsan) is ready to defect, and is dangling a list that contains the
identities of every known spy of every nationality. Everyone is desperate to
get their hands on it, so the orders are “trust no one.”
Sofia Boutella plays a mysterious French woman tagging along
everywhere, whose importance will grow. Roland Møller is Bremovych, the local
Russian chief, who has hands in every pot. Bill Skarsgård plays a helpful young
proto-computer geek, and Daniel Bernhardt is memorable as a local tough who
goes toe-to-toe with our heroine in a couple of brutal blond vs. blonde matchups.
The film is told through the framing device of a debriefing
interview back in West Berlin, where Broughton has turned up beaten to a pulp,
her mission failed. Toby Jones and John Goodman play English and American
spooks, respectively, giving her the business and trying to interrogate some
straight answers out of her.
Theron works the poker face, letting her mask slip but once.
Theron works the poker face, letting her mask slip but once.
Sexy, smart and seriously high-energy, “Atomic Blonde” is
like James Bond mixed up with steampunk fantasy and a heavy dollop of feminism.
John Wick, meet your match.
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