Starring: Jason Statham, Ben Foster, Donald Sutherland.
Director: Simon West
The basic plot of The Mechanic—a loose remake of the 1972
Charles Bronson movie of the same name—holds boundless promise for
action fans, and mostly fulfills it: A preternaturally skilled hitman
(Jason Statham) teaches a young loose cannon (Six Feet Under’s
Ben Foster) the tricks of his slick, deadly trade. But things aren’t
that simple, naturally. The duo connect at the funeral of Foster’s
father (Donald Sutherland), who was also Statham’s mentor in the killin’
business—and whom Statham murdered early in the movie, under orders
from his clearly no-good handler. Feeling some pang of regret even
though Sutherland double-crossed the company, Statham takes the
hotheaded, boozed-out scamp under his wing and sets about making him
into an ice-veined killer. It’s the least he can do, right?
For a good chunk of its running time, The Mechanic is a buddy
movie about two guys really enjoying murder together. They almost seem
ready to high-five after a job well done, even as Statham’s character
glumly explains “I wanted you to see one up close.” In order to ease the
audience’s conscience, the protagonists’ victims are conveniently more
awful than they are: an arms dealer “who’ll sell to anybody,” a
ridiculous cult leader, a hulking gay assassin who wants to fuck Foster.
Statham’s hit-plans are frequently complex, and he’s always eight or
nine steps ahead of everyone else—so much that it would’ve been nice to
see these guys actually planning more assignments instead of just
watching those assignments unfold. But that would leave less screen time
for strangulations, splattery headshots, and murder-by-fireplace-tools,
so maybe it’s just as well.
Statham and Foster play off each other nicely, and director Simon West (Con Air)
strikes a playful balance between carnage and conviviality, gore and
gregariousness. A confrontation between the two leads is inevitable, and
since The Mechanic is so morally muddled to begin with, it’s
difficult to tell where things are headed, or how to take sides. That
isn’t because these characters are well-drawn or terribly complex—they
assuredly aren’t—but it’s still an unusual, intriguing path for a movie
like this to travel. The only thing certain going into the climax is
that guns will be fired and things will explode in style. Couple that
with actual acting—Statham is the most winning action hero around, and
Foster brings some nuance that the script probably doesn’t deserve—and
it’s bloody fun.
Monday, September 12, 2016
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