The
Taken series seems to exist solely to justify an
agoraphobic’s fear of going outside. In the first film a young woman
goes to Paris and is immediately targeted by sex traffickers. In the
second movie the young woman’s family is targeted by the relatives of
the now dead sex traffickers while on vacation in Istanbul. But now, in
Taken 3, the Russian mob will get you the second you step out of your door. I’m betting to mix it up
Taken 4, the film will
involve villains who somehow snatch the young woman’s baby while it’s still in vitro.
We really hope so.
The plot of
Taken 3 is basically a mixture of the second film and
The Fugitive. Brian Mills (
Liam Neeson) is back and this time he’s dealing with some nasty Russian mobsters who murder his ex-wife Lenore (
Famke Janssen) and frame him for the crime. Their reasons for doing this are convoluted and stupid. It seems Lenore’s husband Stuart (
Dougray Scott)
had some business deal with them and it went poorly, so now they want
their money back. No spoiler warning required there, because if any
viewer watching this movie did not immediately suspect that the slimy
husband is involved, they either have never seen a movie before or are
dead.
“I’m not evil, I’m still just bitter about losing the Wolverine role to Hugh Jackman.”
A rip-off of
The Fugitive would not be complete
without the inclusion of the intrepid law enforcement officer who is
honor bound to get his man. Tonight the part of Tommy Lee Jones will be
played by
Forest Whitaker
as Inspector Franck Dotzler, whom the writers think having play with a
chess piece and some elastic bands is the same as creating a character.
“Holding this makes me look intelligent, right?”
The movie spends most of its time dealing with Brain Mills eluding
the police while simultaneously trying to figure the who’s and the why’s
behind the death of his wife, and this is where the series loses any
credibility it had (if it ever had any), as not only does Brian assault
multiple police officers who find him at the scene of the murder, but he
later gets into a high speed car chase resulting in multiple major
collisions with police and passing motorists, impersonates a police
officer, destroys a parking garage, sets off a smoke bomb inside a
college campus building, hacks into the police database, kills multiple
Russian thugs, and destroys a jet as it taxis down a runway. All this he
does, yet once he exposes the true villains behind his wife’s death he
walks away Scott Free.
“I committed all those crimes while doing your job so you can’t arrest me.”
Granted, the action in this movie is fun, if mostly ridiculous, and
Liam Neeson can pretty much do this part in his sleep by now, but as
whole it’s not a very good movie. The screenwriters throw in stuff like
his daughter (
Maggie Grace)
being pregnant without thinking about making it relevant to the plot,
and not just there for the obvious padding out of the films running
time. And someone please inform these hacks that insurance companies do
not pay off on a death benefit while the murder of said person is still
being investigated. I’m not saying your action flick’s script has to be
as tightly written as
Double Indemnity but it would be nice if it at least made a semblance of sense.
“Phil, do you find it strange that there is no wire partition between us and this trained killer?”
Lazy, dumb, and full of enough plot holes to sink the Titanic, it’s just embarrassing to see
Luc Besson’s name on this when he’s brought us quality films such as
La Femme Nikita and
LĂ©on: The Professional.
So I for one hope this is in fact the last installment of this franchise and that Neeson maybe goes off to make
Darkman II next.
“Take the fucking elephant!”
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