Showing posts with label The Gray Man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Gray Man. Show all posts

Friday, 22 July 2022

THE GRAY MAN : Tuesday 19th July 2022

I saw 'THE GRAY MAN', Rated MA15+, at my local independent movie theatre this week, and this American action thriller film is Directed by Joe and Anthony Russo who have previously helmed four MCU films, being 'Captain America : The Winter Soldier' in 2014, 'Captain America : Civil War' in 2016, 'Avengers : Infinity War' in 2018 and 'Avengers : Endgame' in 2019, amongst other feature films and TV series. Based on the 2009 novel of the same name by Mark Greaney, the film went on limited release from last week before being released on Netflix from 22nd July. Costing US$200M to produce it is the most expensive film ever made by Netflix, and it hopes to start a series of films based on the eleven 'Gray Man' novels. It has garnered generally mixed or average Reviews so far. 

The film opens up in 2003 in a prison cell where Court Gentry (Ryan Gosling) is incarcerated until 2031 for the murder of his father. He is being interviewed, or rather recruited, by Donald Fitzroy (Billy Bob Thornton) who works for the CIA and recognises in Gentry the attributes necessary to turn him into a black ops mercenary, with the associated skills to take out all the bad guys on their hit list. Fitzroy tells Gentry that he can walk out of the prison in thirty minutes a free man, or he can serve out his sentence, and for what it's worth Fitzroy would have done the same thing as Gentry did that got him into the slammer in the first place. 

We then fast forward eighteen years to the present day. We are in Bangkok in a lavish hotel counting down the minutes to midnight on NYE. Gentry (now known as Sierra Six or simply Six) is ordered to take out a hit on a mark set to arrive shortly in time for the fireworks extravaganza. With the marks entourage in tow, and Six now poised to take the shot, he hesitates, so allowing the mark to walk outta there. But Six pursues his mark and what follows is a close quarter hand to hand fight on the ground floor amongst exploding tubes of fireworks. Six overcomes his mark, and as the mark lays bleeding out, he hands Six a medallion containing a USB drive, and says that he is Sierra Four, before he dies. Six gets the hell outta there, goes to an internet gaming joint and plugs in the USB, but it is heavily encrypted and without the necessary passcodes can't access what is contained therein. So, he is next seen posting it in a letterbox to an unknown recipient. 

Back in Langley, at CIA HQ, Dani Miranda (Ana de Armas) another CIA Agent is being questioned by Denny Carmichael (Rege-Jean Page) her superior as to the role she played in the Bangkok hit, what if anything the mark gave to Six, and for her to very seriously consider her future career if he doesn't get the answers he wants. Miranda has an obvious dislike for Carmichael and gives nothing away. 

Meanwhile, Six hot wires a Tuk Tuk and calls Fitzroy asking for him to arrange for his extraction. Fitzroy has subsequently retired but still has connections and influence. His tells Six to get to Chiang Mai where an extraction team will be waiting with a cargo plane fuelled and ready for take off with a team of friendlies on board. 

In the meantime, Carmichael has recruited Lloyd Hansen (Chris Evans), a psychotic and torture loving former colleague of Six who lasted just five months in the service of the CIA before venturing out on his own and operating a seemingly very successful mercenaries for hire business. Hansen has kidnapped the young daughter of Fitzroy, Claire (Julia Butters) and is threatening to do all manner of nasty things to her should he not get the answers from Fitzroy, whom he also now holds captive. Hansen coerces Fitzroy in telling the extraction team to dispense with Six. And so whilst cruising at 25,000 feet and while Six catches up on some much needed shut eye, the extraction team spring into action with the intention of killing Six. But, needless to say this doesn't go according to plan, and more close quarter hand to hand combat leads to a stray bullet blowing a gaping hole in the fuselage, various bad dudes getting thrown out of the plane, and the aircraft steadily disintegrating as Six jumps out of it without a parachute before it explodes in midair. He of course glides toward a bad dude with a parachute, they fight in free fall and Six lands shaken but not stirred somewhere in Turkey. 

Next up Six goes to Vienna to obtain a fake ID and passport, but alas the local who is organising the said documents in secretly in cahoots with Hansen. He successfully manages to capture Six in a deep pit through a bullet proof trap door in the floor just about where Six was standing to have his passport photo taken. Six, using his best MacGyver skills, manages to create a flood of water so elevating him up the pit and rigs an explosive charge to detonate just at the right time when Hansen and his goons arrive at the scene. In the ensuing mayhem, Six comes face to face and fist to fist with Hansen, but on the way out of the building Miranda shoots a tranquilizer dart in the arse of Hansen, and then into Six before loading him up in the boot of her car. 

When Six comes round a short time later, Miranda and Six talk over their predicament and what their next move should be. It turns out that Six posted the USB drive to Margaret Cahill (Alfre Woodard), the former head of CIA Special Op's, who has now also subsequently retired and living in Prague. So, the pair head off to Prague, as Cahill seems to be one of the only people they can trust, and who would have the encryption codes to allow them to access what is contained on that USB drive. Meanwhile, Hansen is back in Croatia in a very lavish and very old villa tracking Six's every move. Hansen also takes the opportunity to interrogate and torture Fitzroy to find out his whereabouts in Prague, and who it is there whom he would most trust.

Arriving in Prague Six and Miranda meet with Cahill who tells the pair that she has terminal cancer and has been given three months to live. But that doesn't stop her from opening up the USB drive and revealing that Carmichael and Hansen have been involved in some nefarious crimes around the world as their own very secretive and covert army of mercenaries taking out the Who's Who of people of influence. Needless to say, as Hansen watches on from Croatia he orders his assembled team of assassins to converge on Cahill's apartment and wreak havoc with all manner of firepower. As Cahill remains in the apartment holding onto a hand grenade, she allows Six and Miranda to escape via an underground tunnel leading out into the street, whilst providing the pair with her armour plated bullet proof glassed Audi car. What follows is a blood bath in down town Prague, as Miranda evades various other vehicles behind the wheel of Cahill's car, while Six is going head to head and toe to toe with numerous goons inside a tram. It doesn't end well for the numerous local Police killed in the conflagration, the assassins who also meet their swift demise courtesy of Six, and the tram which ultimately hurtles sideways and off track into the sandstone columns of a building causing much destruction, on top of the trail of mayhem left behind in the wake of Cahill's apartment being destroyed. 

Next up we find our intrepid rogue agents heading to Croatia to take out Hansen once and for all, rescue Fitzroy and his daughter, and regain the USB drive which has subsequently fallen into the hands of Avik San (Dhanush), and Indian assassin working for Team Hansen. Six and Miranda go in heavily armed to the villa under cover of darkness and while Miranda takes out all the external gun placements Six concentrates his efforts on the internal goons and getting to Fitzroy and Claire. Needless to say its all in a days work for the pair who successfully overcome their foes, leaving Miranda to battle it out with Avik San, and Six to guide the Fitzroy's to safety, although Fitzroy takes a bullet to the stomach and orders Six to take his Claire with him, leaving him with a single hand grenade which he pulls the pin on when Hansen and three of his goons are upon him. Of course the blast takes out the three goons, but Hansen scrambles to his feet and continues to give chase, culminating with Hansen holding Claire at gunpoint inside a maze within the grounds, while Six trails behind in search. The three come face to face around a fountain in the centre of the maze, and Six tells Hansen to let Claire go, which he does, leaving the pair to fight to the death. In the end it is Suzanne Brewer (Jessica Henwick), Carmichael's off sider, who plugs Hansen in the chest with a bullet and kills him dead. She also plugs Six with a non-life threatening bullet wound, just to add to his stabbings, slashings and beating he took from Hansen. 

We then fast forward two weeks to a heavily guarded private hospital in which Six has been non-responsive, and Claire is being held. Brewer and Carmichael plan on paying a visit to Six, with the latter questioning Brewer as to why she let Six live. Because he's a valuable asset and one of the most capable operatives they have she responds. As they exit the lift, the pair are confronted with the bodies of several guards and Six's now empty bed. He is next seen in silhouette passing along the windows of the room where Claire is being held taking out a number of goons. He then enters the room, rescues Claire and the two are seen speeding out of the hospital grounds in a SUV. 

'The Gray Man'
, which for the most part I enjoyed, is a mash up of Jason Bourne, Ethan Hunt and John Wick with a little bit of James Bond thrown in there for good measure. It's an entertaining ride for sure with plenty of exotic locations, wide sweeping aerial drone shots, action set pieces, gunplay and close quarter combat, solid enough performances from the ensemble cast, and sarcastic quips aplenty to raise the occasional smile, but what it lacks is a fresh approach and sufficient intrigue to make this film stand above all the others in this increasingly overcrowded genre. Watch it from the comfort of your own sofa at home when it lands on Netflix this week, chow down on a big bowl of popcorn, leave your brain in the kitchen and strap in for a high octane super charged globe trotting journey that sees two Hollywood fav's go head to head. What's not to like?

'The Gray Man' merits three claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 13 July 2022

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 14th July 2022.

Now in its 26th year, The Fantasia International Film Festival, which was launched in 1996 is held in the Canadian city of Montreal, from Thursday 14th July through until Wednesday 3rd August. Since its inception, this festival is now recognised as the largest and most influential event of its kind in North America, a leader on the genre film scene and one of the country’s most popular film festivals. With a varied programming and an emphasis on the imaginative cinema of Canadian and world film, Fantasia’s offerings range from unique and powerful personal visions to international commercial crowd-pleasers rarely seen in North America, while discovering and nurturing exciting new talents and offering a platform through which artists and audiences can connect. 

Since it began, the Fantasia International Film Festival has explored the diverse realms of genre cinema, creating bridges between the cutting edge and the mainstream, and providing a festive but professional environment where emerging artists are given exposure alongside their more established counterparts, both locally and internationally.

The Opening Night film is 'Polaris' from Canada and Directed and Written by Kirsten Carthew and tells the story, set in 2144, against the harsh backdrop of a post-apocalyptic subarctic wasteland, of a young girl, raised by a Polar Bear, narrowly escapes capture from a brutal band of warrior women and sets out across the vast winter landscape in search of the only guiding light the girl knows, the Polaris star.

The Closing Night film is 'Next Sohee' from South Korea and is Directed and Written by Jung Ju-ri and is about Sohee, a high school student who starts training for a subcontracted position at a Call Centre. She is unable to bear the stressful work culture, when a mysterious incident leads to her death. A Detective starts an investigation into her death.

The main competition for feature films is the Cheval Noir Competition, and this year there are fourteen films in contention. Briefly, these are :-

* 'The Artiface Girl' from the USA and Directed by Franklin Ritch. World Premier.
* 'Convenience Story' from Japan and Directed by Satoshi Miki. World Premier.
* 'Coupez!
 (Final Cut)' from France and Directed by Michel Hazanavicius. North American Premier.
* 'Detective vs Sleuths' from Hong Kong and Directed by Wai Ka-Fai. North American Premier.
* 'The Elderly' from Spain and Directed by Raul Cerezo and Fernando Gonzalez Gomez. World Premier.
* 'The Fish Tale' from Japan and Directed by Shuichi Okita. World Premier.
* 'The Harbinger' from the USA and Directed by Andy Mitton. World Premier.


* 'House of Darkness' from the USA and Directed by Neil LaBute. International Premier.
* 'Megalomaniac'
from Belgium and Directed by Karim Ouelhaj. World Premier.
* 'My Broken Mariko' from Japan and Directed by Yuki Tanada. World Premier.
* 'Next Sohee' from South Korea and Directed by Jung Ju-ri. North American Premier.
* 'Polaris' from Canada and Directed by Kirsten Carthew. World Premier.
* 'Popran' from Japan and Directed by Shinichiro Ueda. North American Premier.
* 'Special Delivery' from South Korea and Directed by Park Dae-min. North American Premier.

For more detail on the above mentioned films in The Cheval Noir competition, plus the other competitions running - The New Flesh Competition for Best First Feature and The International Short Film Competition, plus a whole lot more besides, you can visit the official website at : https://fantasiafestival.com

This week there are five new release movies to tempt you out to your local Odeon on a fresh mid-Winter's evening, kicking off with an action thriller that sees the CIA's top asset, his identity known to no one, who uncovers agency secrets, triggers a global hunt by assassins set loose by his ex-colleague. This is followed up by an amateur golfer who achieves his late-in-life goal of participating in the British Open Golf Championship in 1976, much to the ire of the staid golfing community. Next up we have a brilliant young fund manager who leaves her unfulfilling job and long-term boyfriend to chase her lifelong dream of becoming an opera singer. Then we turn to a romantic drama offering that following a fatal accident, this young woman is given the chance to save the love of her life when she discovers that their mixtape can take her back in time. And closing out the week we have a doco that offers the viewer the 'definitive' exploration of the Canadian singer and songwriting legend as seen through the prism of his most famous song.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the five latest release new films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release or as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are most welcome to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon outing during the coming week.

* 'THE GRAY MAN' (Rated MA15+) - is an American action thriller film Directed by Joe and Anthony Russo who have previously helmed four MCU films, being 'Captain America : The Winter Soldier' in 2014, 'Captain America : Civil War' in 2016, 'Avengers : Infinity War' in 2018 and 'Avengers : Endgame' in 2019, amongst other feature films and TV series. Based on the 2009 novel of the same name by Mark Greaney, the film goes on limited release from this week before being released on Netflix from 22nd July. Costing US$200M to produce it is the most expensive film ever made by Netflix, and it hopes to start a series of films based on the 'Gray Man' novels.

The Gray Man is CIA black ops agent Court Gentry (Ryan Gosling), aka, Sierra Six. Plucked from a federal penitentiary and recruited by his handler, Donald Fitzroy (Billy Bob Thornton), Gentry was once a highly-skilled, Agency-sanctioned mercenary. But now the tables have turned and Gentry is the target, hunted across the globe by Lloyd Hansen (Chris Evans), a former cohort at the CIA, who will stop at nothing to take him out. Agent Dani Miranda (Ana de Armas) has his back, and it looks as though he’ll need it! Also starring Jessica Henwick, Rege-Jean Page, Dhanush, Alfre Woodard, Callan Mulvey, Scott Haze and Michael Gandolfini.

* 'THE PHANTOM OF THE OPEN' (Rated M) - is a British biographical comedy drama film Directed by Craig Roberts in his third film making effort following 'Just Jim' in 2015 and 'Eternal Beauty' in 2019, although he also has forty-one screen acting credits to his name also in both major feature films and TV series. This film is based on the 2010 biography 'The Phantom of the Open: Maurice Flitcroft, The World's Worst Golfer' by Simon Farnaby and Scott Murray. The film tells the heartwarming true story of Maurice Flitcroft (Mark Rylance), a dreamer and unrelenting optimist. This humble crane operator from Barrow-in-Furness, in Cumbria, England who managed to gain entry to The British Open Golf Championship qualifying in 1976, despite never playing a round of golf before. He shot the worst round in Open history and drew the ire of the golfing elite, but became a folk hero in the process and, more importantly, showed his family the importance of pursuing your dreams. Also starring Sally Hawkins and Rhys Ifans the film saw its World Premier screening at the BFI London Film Festival back in mid-October last year, has so far grossed US$3.1M and has garnered generally favourable Reviews.

* 'FALLING FOR FIGARO' (Rated M) - this romantic comedy film id Directed and Co-Written by Ben Lewin who has twenty Directorial credits to his name including his debut feature film in 1988 'Georgia', and then the likes of 'The Sessions' in 2012 and 'The Catcher Was a Spy' in 2018. Here then, Millie Cantwell (Danielle Macdonald), an American fund manager, realises one day that her life-long dream is to become an opera singer. Quitting the job and moving away from her boyfriend, she travels to Scotland where she eventually becomes an opera singer following intensive vocal training from former opera diva Meghan Geoffrey-Bishop (Joanna Lumley) and fierce competition from other opera singers. The film was screened at the TIFF in mid-September 2020 but was not released in the US and the UK until October 2021 and only this week in Australia, having generated mixed or average Reviews and grossing just US$170K so far. 

* 'PRESS PLAY' (Rated PG) - this American romantic drama film is Co-Written for the screen and Directed by Greg Bjorkman in his feature film making debut. A young woman, Laura (Clara Rugaard) has a chance to save the love of her life, Harrison (Lewis Pullman) when she discovers that the mix-tape they made together can transport her back in time. Also starring Danny Glover, Matt Walsh, Christina Chang and Lyrica Okano, the film was released Stateside towards the end of June and has received mixed Reviews. 

* 'HALLELUJAH : LEONARD COHEN, A JOURNEY, A SONG' (Rated M) - this music documentary film is Co-Written, Produced, Directed, and Co-Edited by the long time documentary film making pairing of Daniel Geller and Dayna Goldfine. Here, they take us on a journey of Canadian singer-songwriter, poet and novelist Leonard Cohen as seen through the prism of his internationally renowned hymn, 'Hallelujah'. This American documentary combines three creative strands, namely, the songwriter and his times, the song's dramatic journey from record label reject to chart-topping hit, and moving testimonies from major recording artists for whom Hallelujah has become a personal touchstone. Approved for production by Leonard Cohen just before his 80th birthday in 2015, the film shows us never-before-seen archival materials from the Cohen Trust including his own personal notebooks, journals and photographs, performance footage and extremely rare audio recordings and interviews. 'Hallelujah' has been performed by almost two hundred artists the world over in various languages. The song is the subject of the book 'The Holy or the Broken: Leonard Cohen, Jeff Buckley & the Unlikely Ascent of 'Hallelujah' by Alan Light and published in 2012. Cohen died in late 2016 aged 82.

With five new release movie offerings this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online. In the meantime, I'll see you sometime somewhere at your local Odeon in the coming week.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-