3 Days to Kill is a fun spy movie that might be the most Besson of all of the Luc
Besson-produced neo-Eurospy movies to date. (Since the success of The Transporter, his company, EuropaCorp, has reliably churned out mid-budget spy/action movies made with European locations
and at least partly European money, most starring slightly over-the-hill
Hollywood stars looking for a late career comeback as an action hero. In other
words, they’re following the reliable formula of the Sixties "Eurospy" genre, and
generally doing an entertaining job of it.) That’s not to say that it’s the best Besson-produced action flick; it’s
to say that it’s the most. Besson did
not direct 3 Days to Kill, but he
co-wrote it (with his Taken
collaborator Adi Hasak) and produced it. McG directs, in a style that feels
like an homage to Besson. Introducing last week’s Hollywood premiere, the director
said that Besson’s early movies like La
Femme Nikita and Leon were huge
influences on him, and nowhere is that more evident than in 3 Days to Kill. Unlike Besson’s usual
go-to helmer of late, Olivier Megaton, McG is a director who understands how to
make a comprehensible action sequence to begin with. Add to that a stylistic
nod to Besson, who’s one of the all-time masters of the action setpiece, and we’re
left with a number of excellent action scenes in 3 Days to Kill. But also true to Besson’s own proclivities, we’re
left with a wildly uneven tone that veers haphazardly between spy action and
family dramedy, odd ethnic-based comedy, unbelievable coincidences, and
schmaltzy, never quite credible, almost creepy scenes between a father and a
teenage daughter. Yes, all of the best and worst of Luc Besson is present and
accounted for in 3 Days to Kill,
hence its claim to the title of the most
Besson movie to date. That dooms it to inevitably negative reviews, but if you’re
a fan of the French director/producer, you’ll find a whole lot to like. Not
only has McG crafted an undeniably Besson action film, but he’s also made a
better Besson movie than the last real
Besson movie, The Family!
Kevin Costner (No Way Out), fresh off a solid supporting
spy role in the somewhat underwhelming Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit,
steps into the limelight again as top CIA assassin Ethan Renner. (Now there’s a name contrived to conjure
images of Mission: Impossible!) In
the highly impressive opening action scene (which is never quite equaled), Ethan
is part of a mission to take out a ruthless international terrorist arms
dealer, The Wolf, and his sadistic henchman, The Albino, at a Belgrade hotel.
Both baddies are played by superbly cast career Euro villains, the former by
Richard Sammel, who has previously menaced both James Bond (as the eyepatched
baddie Gettler in Casino Royale) and
OSS 117 (as the Nazi Moeller in OSS 117:Cairo Nest of Spies), the latter by the supremely creepy Tómas Lemarquis. The
mission goes spectacularly wrong, but Ethan still puts in a good showing until
he’s felled by some sort of seizure, and the villains get away.
The cause of the seizure is revealed
to be advanced terminal brain cancer, effectively putting an end to Ethan’s CIA
career. Retired and dying, he heads to Paris to reconnect with his estranged
wife and daughter, Christine (Gladiator’s
Connie Nielsen) and Zoey (True Grit
Oscar nominee Hailee Steinfeld). Going through her difficult teenage years
without a dad (and unaware of his condition), Zoey is naturally resistant to
her father’s attempts to reinsert himself into her life. Christine gives Ethan
a similarly cold reception until he’s forced to reveal that he’s dying (in
order to get her to sign the proper papers to put his affairs in order), at
which point she allows him to take care of Zoey for three days while she flies
to England on business. From Zoey’s attitude (and her preference to spend time
with her older boyfriend instead of her dad, or to go to raves with her friends
instead of the amusement parks Ethan took her to when she was 9), it’s clear these
will be a challenging three days for Ethan already. But they’re made all the
more challenging when the impossibly glamorous CIA agent Vivi Delay (Machete Kills’ Amber Heard) roars into
his life in a Peugeot RCZ. (I’ll bet anything her driving scenes were added
after Besson or McG saw her on Top Gear!)
Vivi wants Ethan back on the
job, because he’s the only man who’s ever seen The Wolf in person and can
identify him. And she offers him about the only incentive a man in his position
can’t possibly pass up: a new lease on life, via an experimental drug with
unstable side effects. So he accepts this final mission, and she tasks him with
killing The Wolf. It’s left entirely unclear why a sick man taking a drug that
leaves him prone to sudden hallucinations is sent on this mission alone. Surely
another agent in better condition could accompany him to pull the trigger when
Ethan identifies the target—even Vivi herself, who’s presented as more than
capable. (In my imagination, every time something like this comes up in a story
conference on a Besson movie, the discussion ends with an exaggerated Gallic
shrug and a thickly accented “’oo cares?”…
and I don’t really have any problem with that!) Vivi is a bit of an enigma. In her
first appearance at Langley she’s dressed roughly how one might expect an
ambitious young female case officer to dress, but in every subsequent scene she’s
glammed up like Fatima Blush designed her wardrobe, and accompanied by music
that nearly a century of sound cinema has conditioned us to associate with
human incarnations of the Devil. While these clues might seem like incredibly
unsubtle hints that she’s some sort of double agent, that’s not the case. It’s
just how she’s presented, and it’s another one of those odd little touches that
left me scratching my head, but which prove entirely forgivable in a Besson
film.
When Ethan accepts the CIA’s
offer, this sets into motion the movie’s central conflict: balancing his spy
life with his dad life. There are shades of Taken
here, but unlike Maggie Grace (who at 24 played Liam Neeson’s teenage daughter in
the first film like she was a developmentally challenged 10-year-old), actual teenager Steinfeld imbues her
character with a credible teenage angst no matter how much Ethan (and the
script) chooses to infantilize her. All of the usual antics occur. Ethan is late for the
dinner he had promised to prepare (tuna) because he was doing spy stuff. Then
it turns out Zoey hates tuna anyway. Ethan is interrupted on more than one occasion by a phone call from or about Zoey while
he’s smack in the middle of torturing someone for information in his best Jack
Bauer style. And, of course, Ethan uses his spy skills and contacts to delve
deeper into his daughter’s personal life than she’d like. (Though, like Taken’s Bryan Mills, his overprotective
instincts prove correct.) There’s also a running gag about him buying her a
purple girl’s bike and wanting her to ride it when she’s of an age when she’d
much rather ride the Metro with her friends or ride in her boyfriend’s car.
The thing is, hackneyed as they might sound, many of these scenes prove genuinely funny! The bike gag is a good one, since her refusal to ride it results in Ethan himself having to haul it around Paris with him while he’s doing his spy stuff. The bike even plays a starring role in the movie’s second-best action sequence, in which he waylays a motorcade with the aid of an explosive he sneakily applies to the undercarriage of an SUV with his shoe while passing it on the bike. More successful comedy comes from Ethan’s decision to stow a bound informant he was in the middle of torturing in his trunk when he’s called by Zoey’s principal to pick her up early because she’s gotten into a fight. How do you lecture your child about violence when there’s a loud, suspicious banging noise emanating from the boot of your car?
The dramatic aspects of his
daughter bonding are somewhat less successful. It turns out she doesn’t want to
ride a bike because, growing up with an absent father, she never learned how to
ride one. (I guess her mother didn’t know how either?) This leads to a Butch
Cassidy sequence of Ethan teaching his nearly grown daughter how to ride a
bicycle. Then there’s that overprotectiveness. When he uses his espionage know-how
to track Zoey to a rave when she had told him she’d be spending the night at a
friend’s house, he arrives at this dangerous dance party just in time to save
her from being gang raped. While we all like watching old spies beat up
would-be rapists and I appreciated the sly nod to Costner’s famous Bodyguard role when he carries his
daughter out of the club, I was less comfortable with the way the movie then
passes off that potentially scarring incident as trifling for the sake of
comedy.
Watch the trailer here.
1 comment:
I went and saw the film based on your review and if you know what you are getting into, a viewer might enjoy the hour and forty minutes of entertainment. It certainly is a Besson film only with a little more intentional comedic scenes than some of his other action films. This film does have a plot that you really don't want to analyze too carefully. So, sit back and enjoy and be glad you did not go see Pompeii.
Recently, a film by Luc Besson, that I purchased on blu-ray and thoroughly enjoyed is 'The Extraordinary Adventures of Adele Blanc Sec". If you are in the right frame of mind, you will have a lot of fun with this film.
Post a Comment