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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Hitman
Not quite the Bourne franchise
By
TOM MEEK
|
November 20, 2007
HITMAN
2.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Hitman
.
Timothy Olyphant, long a garnish in films like
Go
and
Live Free or Die Hard
, takes centerstage in this video-game-to-big-screen-actioneer helmed by French stylist Xavier Gens. He plays Agent 47, a genetically enhanced assassin taking orders from a nebulous network known as “the organization.” The first chapter, in what looks to be a series, has 47 caught in a set-up when he’s given orders to take out the Russian president. The hit goes sideways, and several factions want him dead, yet even though he’s a WASP with a clean-shaven dome and a barcode tattoo’d on the back of his neck, they can’t find him till he finds them. The bigger plot, which involves a dogged Interpol cop (Dougray Scott) and a sassy Russian sex slave (Olga Kurylenko), is awkwardly paced and muddled. Gens and screenwriter Skip Woods obviously yearn for something special like the Bourne franchise, but what they’ve coughed up is smaller-scale and more forgettable, along the lines of
xXx
.
100 minutes | Boston Common + Fenway + Fresh Pond + Chestnut Hill + Suburbs
Related
:
Frontière(s)/Frontier(s)
,
Review: A Perfect Getaway
,
Autumn peeves
,
More
Frontière(s)/Frontier(s)
There are no lunatics in the closet in Frontière(s), writer/director Xavier Gens’s NC-17 French-language gorefest.
Review: A Perfect Getaway
David Twohy's film may be pulp, but it's well-crafted, entertaining pulp.
Autumn peeves
With pundits already reading political significance into summer blockbusters like The Dark Knight (“Is Batman a stand-in for George Bush? Discuss.”), the meatier movies of fall arrive not a moment too soon.
Review: The Crazies
George Romero has always had a knack for raising the deceased and having them dine on family and friends.
Not so great X-pectations
It doesn't bode well when one of a movie's supervillains has a Roman numeral for a name.
Missed the bus
Letters to the Boston editor, November 21, 2008
Catch and Release
Of all the characters in Susannah Grant’s punishing romantic comedy, Grady, the former fiancé of Gray (Jennifer Garner), has the least to complain about: he’s dead. Watch the trailer for Catch and Release (QuickTime)
Quantum mechanic
Little Solace for Bond fans
Truly Tess
Any film/TV adaptation of Hardy is in fact rare.
Less
Topics
:
Reviews
,
Interpol
,
Timothy Olyphant
,
Xavier Gens
,
More
,
Interpol
,
Timothy Olyphant
,
Xavier Gens
,
Olga Kurylenko
,
Skip Woods
,
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|
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view all
[
05/26
]
Arborea + Christopher Paul Stelling + dilly dilly
@ One Longfellow Square
[
05/26
]
"Bike Month: Alley Cat Bike Race & After Party"
@ SPACE Gallery
[
05/26
]
Liquid Sky + Icepicks + Baxx Sisi's
@ Bayside Bowl
ARTICLES BY TOM MEEK
REVIEW: GOD BLESS AMERICA
| May 17, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture ( i.e. , Paris Hilton, the Kardashians, and American Idol ) and the indignity of being an office drone.
REVIEW: THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS
| April 24, 2012
Peter Lord, animator behind claymation staples Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run , directs this very British, very dry romp on the high seas during the time when Britannia did indeed rule the waves.
REVIEW: GOD BLESS AMERICA
| April 18, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture (i.e., Paris Hilton, the Kardashians and American Idol) and the indignity of being an office drone.
REVIEW: UNDEFEATED
| March 15, 2012
Dan Lindsay and T. J. Martin's Oscar-winning documentary about an underequipped high-school football team competing against big-time programs across Tennessee offers a potent contemplation on race and opportunity.
REVIEW: DR. SEUSS' THE LORAX
| March 01, 2012
Regrettably, this team loses a lot of Seuss's quirkiness, though not the message about corporate greed and slash-and-burn imperialism.
See all articles by:
TOM MEEK
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