Based on the graphic novel Coldest City by Sam Hart, and taking place just prior to the Berlin Wall falling, the story has a fairly basic plot; MI6 has lost an agent (Sam Hargrave), who was supposed to be acquiring a list with the names of various double agents that if got out could prolong the Cold War indefinitely, and so they send in British agent Lorraine Broughton (Charlize Theron) to get the list and possibly clean up the mess. Now movies with spies trying to get a hold of a list of undercover agents is certainly nothing new, even a 70s Wonder Woman made-for-TV movie used that stale McGuffin, for it to work what you have to do is populate your story with interesting characters that have good motivations, and then throw in some solid action set pieces. Atomic Blonde nails most of these qualities, the action sequences are some of the best I've seen, but if not all of those elements are handled equally as well what we do get is enough to keep us invested.
Friday, July 28, 2017
Atomic Blonde (2017) – Review
Its possible way may never get a female James Bond, as we are still
waiting for them to hire Idris Elba as Bond, but until they do we at
least have this atomic fueled spy thriller by director David Leitch to hold us over. We can also revel in the increase in action films with female protagonist, from science fiction films like Lucy to the DC's box office smash Wonder Woman,
and Charlize Theron is certainly setting the bar high with this entry.
One thing to take note of is that though the trailers seem to be
marketing this as a John Wick style action film, and as
it stars one of the directors that’s not surprising, but the film is
actually more a cold war spy movie than what the marketing department is
letting on.
Based on the graphic novel Coldest City by Sam Hart, and taking place just prior to the Berlin Wall falling, the story has a fairly basic plot; MI6 has lost an agent (Sam Hargrave), who was supposed to be acquiring a list with the names of various double agents that if got out could prolong the Cold War indefinitely, and so they send in British agent Lorraine Broughton (Charlize Theron) to get the list and possibly clean up the mess. Now movies with spies trying to get a hold of a list of undercover agents is certainly nothing new, even a 70s Wonder Woman made-for-TV movie used that stale McGuffin, for it to work what you have to do is populate your story with interesting characters that have good motivations, and then throw in some solid action set pieces. Atomic Blonde nails most of these qualities, the action sequences are some of the best I've seen, but if not all of those elements are handled equally as well what we do get is enough to keep us invested.
Based on the graphic novel Coldest City by Sam Hart, and taking place just prior to the Berlin Wall falling, the story has a fairly basic plot; MI6 has lost an agent (Sam Hargrave), who was supposed to be acquiring a list with the names of various double agents that if got out could prolong the Cold War indefinitely, and so they send in British agent Lorraine Broughton (Charlize Theron) to get the list and possibly clean up the mess. Now movies with spies trying to get a hold of a list of undercover agents is certainly nothing new, even a 70s Wonder Woman made-for-TV movie used that stale McGuffin, for it to work what you have to do is populate your story with interesting characters that have good motivations, and then throw in some solid action set pieces. Atomic Blonde nails most of these qualities, the action sequences are some of the best I've seen, but if not all of those elements are handled equally as well what we do get is enough to keep us invested.
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