I’ll be frank (sorry to transport you) but the jury’s still out on that. Overall and despite everything the film is oddly touching and gentle, almost tender and once or twice it almost begs the question if Jason can actually act. “I didn’t realise there would be so many naked men….“You’ve got a knife… I’ve got a spoon… and you’re only alive because I need information.”.Using months as chapters, it is at the halfway point where Isabel turns up to crystallise the collision between his new life and the people that he once knew and still cares for. They provide the vibrant canvas upon which the story is played out, watching Statham progress from bottle-washer to driver to minder, and into the callous and vile underbelly of this writhing city – where any business is good business, brutal and grubby and violent and very profitable for some. This is a London film, where Soho and the surrounding environs are utterly key in tone, mood and palette. Overall it’s very nicely shot, with the sets often providing the ancillary background necessary to some of the tangential and brazenly homoerotic frippery involved. It intersperses Statham’s back story via flashbacks pretty much all the way through the film, and it’s not just his back story that we learn along the way. Its pace and tone is lazy, mercurial, blunt, direct, urgent, delicate, brutal, kind, touching, gentle, violent, horrible, tender, unsettling. Oh yeah… well… anyway… this is on some levels an odd film. To be honest, I’d really have liked them to be called the Sisters of Mercy… la la la this corrosion… but …sorry… where was I…? (Which will seem ‘somewhat odd’ when we finally greet said incumbent.)Īnyhoo, it is through the good ministries of the ‘Sisters of Redemption’, that he tries to find Isabel, from whom he has become separated in the midst of the hoodlums’ interruption. Indeed, I’d recommend that you never spend a second wondering about the ‘set-up’ given that he conveniently lands in an apartment, where the clothes of the absent incumbent fit him like a glove. Running away from some generic bad-nasty-violent street hoodlums he falls into the hugely, almost hilariously, implausible basis for the whole rest of the plot. In summary: escaped loony ex-commando Statham lives on the streets of London, to both avoid and embrace hummingbirds, and along the way he has adopted Isabel, a young woman who he non-euphemistically looks after. It is also unapologetically three things: a Jason Statham film a London film a night-time film. Just for you lovely, super cuddly, remainers I can reveal that the film is ostensibly a straightforward revenge story, albeit working on several levels, and to be frank, it’s not a bad one at that. Right, so that’s got rid of the riff-raff. If you aren’t bothered to read the remaining words, I’ll cut to the chase and just say that this film is well worth a watching with or without beers – and so you can now safely click away. Star: Jason Statham, Agata Buzek, Vicky McClure, Benedict Wong Rating: B+ (C- if you’re not Statham-tolerant.) Dir: Steven Knight
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