The Movie Cricket

Movie reviews by Sean P. Means.

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Sister Washington (Nadia Sine, right), a Latter-day Saint missionary — aided by Maggie (Adrienne Hartvigsen), a local church member —  makes a call in “Mission Stories,” an anthology of short films about the missionary experience. (Photo courtesy of Excel Entertainment.)

Sister Washington (Nadia Sine, right), a Latter-day Saint missionary — aided by Maggie (Adrienne Hartvigsen), a local church member — makes a call in “Mission Stories,” an anthology of short films about the missionary experience. (Photo courtesy of Excel Entertainment.)

Review: 'Mission Stories' is an uneven anthology that is strictly for the Latter-day Saint faithful.

May 06, 2021 by Sean P. Means

The made-in-Utah movie “Mission Stories” is very direct about what it wants to do: Tell about the experience thousands of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have experienced — going on a mission for the church.

Director Bryce Clark tells three stories, each centering on a story that begins with Latter-day Saint missionaries in the field. And, being an anthology (and an introduction to a web series), the episodes vary greatly in quality and focus.

The story that starts and ends the film, “Full Circle,” begins with a missionary, Darren (Tanner McKay), meeting with one guy, Bruce (Hassan El-Cheikh), and ending up converting Bruce’s beer-drinking buddy, Mike (Seth Pike). Time passes, and Mike (played as an older man by Adam Colvin) is trying to help Darren (played in his older years by Nick Mathews), who has fallen away from the faith and become a drug addict. (A disclaimer: Mathews used to work at The Salt Lake Tribune, where I’ve been for the last 30 years.)

In the second story, “Chuck,” two sister missionaries — Sister Washington (Nadia Sine), who’s shy and devout, and Sister Zeller (Monica Moore Smith), a spoiled young woman more concerned with her boyfriend back home than the job at hand — put aside their differences to help a biker (Joshua Michael French) who works to give up his vices to join the faith.

In the third story, “Hermanos,” a missionary (Brendon French) is given an assignment with a Spanish-speaking mission — even though his Spanish skills are spotty.

Clark wrote all three interlocking stories, co-writing the story “Chuck” with Crystal Myler. The stories fall into familiar patterns. Each story includes, at some point, a convert being baptized. And each is very clear that the act of performing a mission is, despite hardships and setbacks, a generally positive experience.

The best of the three is “Chuck,” which focuses on the human side of missionary work, and the personality friction between young people assigned to work and live together for months on end. “Full Circle” has its overwrought moments, and gets pretty dark, but is largely heartfelt. “Hermanos” feels underdeveloped, and a reminder that miracles make for good sermons but weak screenwriting. 

There’s no doubt that “Mission Stories” is a movie for the faithful, not the skeptical. Viewers who don’t adhere to the Latter-day Saint faith, or have been members of the church but left with no intention to return, can find their entertainment somewhere else. Those who do believe will find some inspiration.

——

‘Mission Stories’

★★1/2

Opens Friday, May 7, in theaters where open. Not rated, but probably PG-13 for depictions of substance abuse and suicide. Running time: 87 minutes.

May 06, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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Michael B. Jordan plays John Kelly, a Navy SEAL out for revenge, in the combat thriller “Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse.” (Photo by Nadja Klier, courtesy of Amazon Studios.)

Michael B. Jordan plays John Kelly, a Navy SEAL out for revenge, in the combat thriller “Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse.” (Photo by Nadja Klier, courtesy of Amazon Studios.)

Review: In 'Without Remorse,' Michael B. Jordan faces assassins in his house and hamfisted writing in the script

April 28, 2021 by Sean P. Means

Before watching “Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse,” I was dubious of the idea of trying to kickstart another franchise based on Clancy’s stories of espionage and military strikes. After watching it, I’m still not convinced — but I know that casting Michael B. Jordan as the protagonist is a step in the right direction.

Jordan plays John Kelly, who we meet as a Navy SEAL, one of an elite squad who can go into any combat situation with precision, stealth and lethal efficiency. The problem Kelly and his team face, while on a mission in Syria that kicks off the movie, is that their weaselly CIA liaison, Ritter (Jamie Bell), hasn’t told them what the real objective is. Even so, Kelly and the team kill the apparent bad guys and, mostly, make it home alive.

Home, for Kelly, means his wife, Pam (Lauren London), who is eight months’ pregnant. But Kelly’s hopes for domestic bliss and fatherhood are dashed one night, when assassins get into his house and murder Pam. That same night, some of Kelly’s SEAL teammates are also killed — leading their boss, Commander Karen Greer (Jodie Turner-Smith), to suspect a link to that last mission in Syria.

Kelly wants revenge, and applies his SEAL skills to attack a Russian diplomat (Merab Ninidze, last seen in “The Courier”) to get the information he wants. This puts Kelly in prison — but that’s a short side trip, because the powers that be, including Ritter and Defense Secretary Lacy (Guy Pearce), see the value in setting a vengeance-seeking weapon like Kelly loose on their apparent common enemy.

Italian director Stefano Sollima (“Sicario: Day of the Soldado”) stages some brutally effective combat and one-on-one sequences. He understands the importance of establishing the geography of an action scene, and using the space to let the combatants attack and defend.

But when the characters have to talk? Oh brother. Clancy was never a subtle writer, between the armaments and machismo, and writers Taylor Sheridan (“Hell or High Water”) and Will Staples (whose credits are mostly in video games, like “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3”) do little to rein in those impulses.

Jordan, however, elevates the film with his intensity and screen presence, even when some moments in the film feel like an alternative origin story for Erik Killmonger, Jordan’s villain character in “Black Panther.” “Without Remorse” was intended to be one of Paramount’s 2020 tentpoles, before COVID-19 shuffled every studio’s movie plans — and was designed as a franchise starter, the bloodier counterpart to Clancy’s Jack Ryan books. It’s unclear if Amazon, which is streaming this film, has sequel aspirations for John Kelly, but if they did, Jordan would be a strong, charismatic actor to build a franchise around.

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‘Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse’

★★1/2

Available for streaming, beginning Friday, April 30, on Prime Video. Rated R for violence. Running time: 110 minutes. 

April 28, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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Four refugees — from left, Farhad (Vikash Bhai), Abedi (Kwabena Ansah), Wasef (Ola Orebiyi) and Omar (Amir El-Masry) — deal with life in a Scottish town as they wait for their asylum approval, in the comedy-drama “Limbo.” (Photo courtesy of Focus Fe…

Four refugees — from left, Farhad (Vikash Bhai), Abedi (Kwabena Ansah), Wasef (Ola Orebiyi) and Omar (Amir El-Masry) — deal with life in a Scottish town as they wait for their asylum approval, in the comedy-drama “Limbo.” (Photo courtesy of Focus Features.)

Review: In 'Limbo,' filmmaker Ben Sharrock makes a strong debut with a funny and absurd story about refugees dealing with boredom and guilt

April 28, 2021 by Sean P. Means

Finding the funny in a tragic situation, writer-director Ben Sharrock’s “Limbo” is an offbeat but oddly warm story of men trapped in a bureaucratic nowhere.

The men are all refugees from the Middle East and Africa, living on a remote island in Scotland, waiting for their asylum appeals to be approved. They spend their days waiting to use the island’s one pay phone — there being only one spot where the cellphone reception is better than the boat that took them across the Mediterranean — or taking lessons in cultural assimilation by a local couple, Helga (Sidse Babett Knudsen) and Boris (Kenneth Collard). They spend their off hours finding items from the local donation center, such as the DVD set of “Friends” that sparks an argument between two African brothers (Kwabena Ansah and Ola Orebiyi) about the meaning of being “on a break.”

At the center of the film is Omar (Amir El-Masry), a refugee from war-ravaged Syria, who carries around his oud (sort of a round guitar) but never plays it, despite the urging of his perpetually chipper Afghani flatmate, Farhad (Vikash Bhai). As Sharrock takes us deeper into Omar’s story, we hear from his parents in Turkey, and hear about his brother, Nabil, who stayed in Syria to fight with the rebels.

Sharrock, in an impressively restrained feature debut, uses the absurd situation of strangers in an out-of-the-way little town to deadpan comic effect. Think “Schitt’s Creek” by way of “Napoleon Dynamite,” and you get a sense of the vibe Sharrock creates.

At the same time, though, Sharrock never forgets the tragedies and pain these characters have suffered to get to this point. He lets his talented actors, particularly El-Masry and Bhai, play through their conflicting emotions: Boredom because they cannot seek employment, frustration that their asylum approval letter never comes, and anxiety that it will come with bad news. They may be stuck in “Limbo,” but the viewer may delight in where they’ve landed.

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‘Limbo’ 

★★★1/2

Opens Friday, April 30, in theaters where open. Rated R for language. Running time: 104 minutes; in English and in Arabic, with subtitles.

April 28, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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Jeff (Rupert Friend) confronts a hideous figure out of his comic-book artwork, in the horror thriller “Separation.” (Photo courtesy of Open Road Films.)

Jeff (Rupert Friend) confronts a hideous figure out of his comic-book artwork, in the horror thriller “Separation.” (Photo courtesy of Open Road Films.)

Review: 'Separation' is effective as a horror movie, and as a drama about divorce and death through a little girl's eyes

April 28, 2021 by Sean P. Means

As a horror movie, director William Brent Bell’s “Separation” is an effective dispenser of creepy atmosphere and unsettling shocks — but as an allegory for the emotional trauma of divorce and grief, it’s got a little more going on upstairs than the average gorefest.

The Vahns, from the outside, would seem to have a perfect family. Mom, Maggie (Mamie Gummer), works in her father’s law firm, while the dad, Jeff (Rupert Friend), works from home as a comic-book artist and watches their 8-year-old daughter, Jenny (Violet McGraw). 

But from within, there are tensions. Jenny hears them at night when her parents argue. Maggie is angry at Jeff for not growing up and getting a real job, and spending more time talking about art with Jenny’s babysitter, Samantha (Madeline Brewer), than keeping Jenny from playing in the attic of their Brooklyn brownstone.

Maggie and Jeff are on the verge of divorce, with Maggie’s dad, Paul (Brian Cox, owning every scene he’s in), backing up his daughter’s desire for sole custody of Jenny. Then Maggie is suddenly killed, run over by an SUV. Jeff tries to help Jenny grieve her mother’s death, though he’s also dealing with that emotional weight — as well as finding a job at a comics publisher, run by an old pal (Eric T. Miller), so he can keep Paul from continuing his fight for custody of Jenny.

Jenny, for her part, takes comfort in her toys — many of them based on the creepy, Tim Burton-esque characters from the comic Jeff and Maggie created before Jenny was born. But there’s something about those characters that’s different now, as if they have minds and vengeful agendas of their own.

Bell — whose last credits were the spooky doll movie “The Boy” and its sequel, “Brahms: The Boy II” — knows how to pull dread out of the air, and he orchestrates the oppressive atmosphere and the periodic scares with masterful precision. He also is smart about how he presents the themes in the script, by first-time feature writers Nick Amadeus and Josh Braun, of divorce and death seen through a child’s eyes. The result is a scary movie that’s also a thoughtful one.

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‘Separation’

★★★

Opens Friday, April 30, in theaters where open. Rated R for language, some violence, and brief drug use. Running time: 107 minutes.

April 28, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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New fighter Cole Young (Lewis Tan, right) fends off an attack by the four-armed Goro in “Mortal Kombat,” based on the video game. (Image courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures / New Line Cinema.)

New fighter Cole Young (Lewis Tan, right) fends off an attack by the four-armed Goro in “Mortal Kombat,” based on the video game. (Image courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures / New Line Cinema.)

Review: 'Mortal Kombat,' a visually stunning and bloody take on the video game, only works when it's not taking itself seriously

April 22, 2021 by Sean P. Means

A quarter century later, and moviemakers still haven’t figured out what to do with the video game franchise “Mortal Kombat” — a ridiculous and violent martial arts game that has been turned into a movie that’s still violent but not quite ridiculous enough.

If you’re familiar with the game, which turns 30 next year, it’s a gathering of fighters who square off, one-on-one, for martial arts battles. What makes the fights legendary are the characters’ finishing moves — which, if your parents didn’t know you were playing, usually involved gross bodily injuries like tearing out someone’s heart or pulling out someone’s spine. 

Over the years, and many reiterations of the game, a mythology has grown to explain why the people are fighting each other. Here, it’s explained that the fighters of the Earthrealm (that’s us) battle other worlds in a tournament — and the nasty Outworld fighters, led by the sorcerer Shang Tsung (played by Chinese actor Chin Han), have won the last nine tournaments; one more, and they will rule Earth forever.

The movie starts instead with one of Shang Tsung’s stable of fighters, Bi-Han (played by Indonesian action star Joe Taslim), wreaking bloody havoc on the family of the warrior Hanso Hasashi (played by Japanese actor Hiroyuki Sanada) in 17th century Japan. Bi-Han — who later takes the fighting name Sub-Zero, due to his freezing powers — defeats Hasashi, and with him his entire bloodline. Or so he thinks; the mystical Lord Raiden (Tadanobu Asano) descends to find Hasashi’s family hid Hanso’s baby daughter from Bi-Han, so the bloodline survives.

Cut to the present day, and a whole new set of characters to learn. The central character now is one not in the game: Cole Young (played by Lewis Tan), an MMA fighter who’s too undisciplined to win in the cage. But he bears the symbol of the dragon, and according to another warrior, Jax (Mehcad Brooks, from “Supergirl”), that means he’s been chosen to fight in Mortal Kombat. Jax also warns Cole that Sub-Zero is trying to kill all the Earth fighters before the tournament, and that Cole’s wife Allison (Laura Brent) and 12-year-old daughter Emily (Matilda Kimber) are in danger.

After finding a safe spot for his family, Cole finds Jax’s friend Sonya Blade (Jessica McNamee), who’s both a strong fighter and a human plot-exposition dispenser. Sonya also has chained up Kano (Josh Larsen), an Australian mercenary who also has the dragon mark — though, we’re informed, he got it by killing another prospective warrior. Sonya and Cole reluctantly team up with Kano to find the secret training center for Earth’s defenders in the tournament — led by the powerful fighters Liu Kang (Ludi Lin) and Kung Lao (Max Huang).

Confused? Don’t be, it’s not worth the trouble. Just know that the forces of good are preparing for battle with Shang Tsung’s minions, who include the four-armed giant Goro. And Liu Kang and Kung Lao are trying to get their team battle-ready and motivated, by unleashing their hidden superpower — because why just fight when you can fight by throwing balls of fire or shooting a laser out of your eye.

Director Simon McQuoid is making his feature debut here, but he’s got an extensive resumé in commercials and video games. His focus is on capturing the game’s atmosphere and icons with up-to-date computer graphics, and fans of the game will recognize certain catchphrases and battle moves. Fans will also appreciate how McQuoid, in a departure from the sanitized 1995 movie, has transferred the game’s hyper-violence and spurting blood intact.

The gushers of blood become almost comical, in a movie that could use more humor. “Mortal Kombat” was always a ludicrous, over-the-top game — and the overwhelming flaw of this movie adaptation is that McQuoid and his crew take it all too seriously. When the movie sticks to the martial-arts action and the cartoonishly gory dispatching of bad guys, it’s not so bad.

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‘Mortal Kombat

★★1/2

Opens Friday, April 23, in theaters where open, and streaming on HBO Max. Rated R for strong bloody violence and language throughout, and some crude references. Running time: 110 minutes; in English, with some scenes in Japanese and Chinese with subtitles. 

April 22, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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Matt (Ed Helms, left), an app developer, hires Anna (Patti Harrison), a 26-year-old college dropout, to be a surrogate to carry his baby, in writer-director Nikole Beckwith’s comedy “Together Together.” (Photo by Tiffany Roohani, courtesy of Bleecke…

Matt (Ed Helms, left), an app developer, hires Anna (Patti Harrison), a 26-year-old college dropout, to be a surrogate to carry his baby, in writer-director Nikole Beckwith’s comedy “Together Together.” (Photo by Tiffany Roohani, courtesy of Bleecker Street Films.)

Review: 'Together Together' is a smart, sly comedy about relationships as a transaction, with a breakout comic performance by Patti Harrison

April 21, 2021 by Sean P. Means

Writer-director Nikole Beckwith fashions a new genre — the platonic romantic comedy — in “Together Together,” a wry comedy about the transactional nature of relationships.

The relationship at the center of this film is literally transactional: Matt (Ed Helms), a successful middle-aged app designer, hires Anna (Patti Harrison), a 26-year-old barista, to be the gestational surrogate to carry his baby. The $15,000 fee, Anna believes, will allow her to finish the college degree that was derailed when she got pregnant as a teen (she put the baby up for adoption).

Anna aims to live her life as normally as possible, given that her belly is gradually swelling. But Matt can’t help but micromanage, concerned that she eats properly and so on. When Matt tries to surprise Anna at her apartment, and sees a guy leaving, an argument ensues about whether sex during pregnancy is safe. “You know the baby is not in my vagina, right?” Anna asks Matt, as these two people realize they’re thrown together in an incredibly intimate relationship with an expiration date.

Beckwith (whose “Stockholm, Pennsylvania” premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2015) is clearly influenced by Woody Allen movies — she even uses the same typeface in the credits — while also commenting humorously and pointedly about the male gaze that dominates Allen’s work. Where Allen’s sympathies would have been entirely with Matt, Beckwith levels the playing field by focusing on Anna’s feelings and experience.

Beckwith creates some quietly funny scenes between Helms and Harrison, as they navigate Matt’s involvement in the pregnancy and how close Anna allows herself to get to Matt. The movie’s final shot is a heartbreaker.

Helms is in his wheelhouse as Matt, the nerdy 40-something trying to rein in his enthusiasm and failing. For people who aren’t fans of Harrison’s work in “Shrill” or “Big Mouth” (where she’s a staff writer), this performance is eye-opening, as she navigates the emotional and physical changes of this pregnant pause in Anna’s life.

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‘Together Together’

★★★1/2

Opening Friday, April 23, in theaters where open. Rated R for some sexual references and language. Running time: 90 minutes.

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This review first appeared on this site on January 31, 2021, when the movie premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival.

April 21, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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Martin (Joel Fry, background), a scientist, and Alma (Ellora Torchia, foreground), a park ranger, are hit hard by an unseen force in the horror thriller “In the Earth.” (Photo courtesy of Neon.)

Martin (Joel Fry, background), a scientist, and Alma (Ellora Torchia, foreground), a park ranger, are hit hard by an unseen force in the horror thriller “In the Earth.” (Photo courtesy of Neon.)

Review: 'In the Earth' considers modern terrors before opening up to a hallucinatory horror ride

April 14, 2021 by Sean P. Means

Modern fears give way to ancient ones in “In the Earth,” a trippy lost-in-the-woods horror thriller that lives in the middle ground between David Lynch and “The Blair Witch Project.”

In a remote English forest, far from where a viral outbreak is decimating cities, scientist Martin Lowery (Joel Fry) has arrived to help solve a mystery: What happened to Martin’s former mentor, Dr. Olivia Wendle (Hayley Squires), who went into the woods and lost contact with the outside. Martin starts a two-day hike to Dr. Wendle’s last known location, with a park ranger, Alma (Ellora Torchia), as his guide on the two-day hike.

On the second day, Martin and Alma are bludgeoned by an unseen attacker. When they wake up, their shoes are gone, Martin’s scientific equipment is trashed, and they’re lost. Soon they are befriended by a hermit, Zach (Reece Shearsmith, late of the UK comedy “The League of Gentlemen”), whose goodwill hides a darker motive.

Writer-director Ben Wheatley, whose past credits include the dystopian “High-Rise” and the guns-ablazin’ “Free Fire,” filmed this movie in a COVID-19 “bubble,” and the eerie dissonance of our pandemic-ruled lives envelops the early scenes of Martin’s arrival. But Wheatley soon plunges his characters, and his audience, into more traditional terrors — shadows in the forest, ancient books, strange noises and the paired madness of Zach’s and Dr. Wendle’s obsessions.

There’s a hallucinogenic quality to Wheatley’s images, as Martin and Alma try to reckon with things they can’t quite believe are happening. Some of those things are bloody and gory, others are just plain weird, and audiences may be torn as to how effective or inscrutable it all becomes. Viewers may find what they get out of “In the Earth” depends on what expectations they bring to it.

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‘In the Earth’

★★★

Opens Friday, April 16, in theaters where open. Rated R for strong violent content, grisly images, and language. Running time: 107 minutes.

April 14, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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Ruby Rose plays Victoria, a single mom with a dark past that’s put to use by a crooked ex-cop (Morgan Freeman), in the action movie “Vanquish.” (Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.)

Ruby Rose plays Victoria, a single mom with a dark past that’s put to use by a crooked ex-cop (Morgan Freeman), in the action movie “Vanquish.” (Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.)

Review: 'Vanquish' puts Ruby Rose on a motorcycle, Morgan Freeman in a wheelchair, and the audience in a coma

April 14, 2021 by Sean P. Means

It’s hard to fathom how many things can go wrong in a movie as thoroughly and consistently as they go wrong in “Vanquish,” an organized crime thriller curiously devoid of thrills.

Morgan Freeman has top billing, playing Damon, a retired police commissioner who’s paralyzed and in a wheelchair in his expansive waterfront mansion. The only person he trusts is his caretaker, Victoria (Ruby Rose), a single mom who frets over getting medical care for her daughter, Lily (Juju Journey Brener).

On this night, though, Victoria learns that Damon, despite his hero-cop reputation, is the godfather of the city’s crooked cops — who are feeling an FBI agent, Monroe (Patrick Muldoon), breathing down their necks. Damon asks Victoria to run a series of errands, “five stops, five pickups,” to collect money from Damon’s various criminal enterprises. When Victoria refuses, Damon forces her into it by holding Lily hostage.

What the audience soon learns is that Victoria is no ordinary caretaker. She’s got a dark past of con games, double crosses and murder. And at each of the five stops, she’s going to encounter people from her past life, and some old scores are going to be settled.

The premise is OK; heck, Jackie Chan has worked magic with less. But director George Gallo, who wrote the classic buddy-chase “Midnight Run” and directed the atrocious Nicolas Cage vehicle “Trapped in Paradise,” seems singularly incapable of staging an action sequence. 

Gallo’s idea of a street chase involves Rose (or her stunt double) whirring along on her motorcycle in front of cars moving a good 20 mph. Gallo doesn’t even try to mount a decent hand-to-hand fight, something at which Rose was fairly adept during her one season as Batwoman. The only time she springs to action is when Victoria is drugged, and then lands in a “Scarface”-sized pile of cocaine — which produces the same effect as a can of spinach to Popeye.

Without any action sequences, Gallo relies on Rose’s acting and charisma, which turns out to be a severe miscalculation. Meanwhile, Freeman looks like he signed on for maybe two days’ work — and spends almost all of it i one room, sitting in a motorized wheelchair.

At a brief 94 minutes, “Vanquish” feels padded to the gills. Maybe it’s the six-minute credit sequence, that uses newspaper headlines and too much percussion to lay out Damon’s unnecessarily elaborate backstory. Or maybe it’s how every time Victoria jumps on her bike to her next pickup, she has flashbacks to things we saw three minutes earlier. Either way, Gallo’s ineptitude is on glaring display, in a movie that will soon fulfill its destiny as one of those titles you skip past on Netflix on the way to something else.

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‘Vanquish’

★

Opens Friday, April 16, in select theaters; on digital VOD starting Tuesday, April 20. Rated R for bloody violence, language, some sexual material and drug use. Running time: 94 minutes.

April 14, 2021 /Sean P. Means
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