CRISIS – Review

Scene from the opioid crisis thriller CRISIS, starring Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly, and Armie Hammer. Photo: Philippe Bosse. Courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

The crisis at the center of writer/director Nicholas Jarecki’s thriller CRISIS is the opioid crisis. The fact-inspired thriller CRISIS runs on three lines – a whistle-blowing scientist, a woman recovering from addiction to prescription painkillers unraveling a tragic mystery,, and an undercover DEA agent trying to break up a drug ring running prescription painkillers across the US-Canadian border. The triple thriller has a lot of threads to keep track of but CRISIS features a sterling cast headed by Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly, and Armie Hammer.

Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly and Armie Hammer all head up separate narrative threads that represent different aspects of the vicious circle of the opioid crisis. Although the Covid pandemic has pushed all other crises off the headlines, this one has continued to grow and will quickly re-emerge in the public sphere. Jarecki tackles the whole of the opioid problem, from the over-prescribing of drugs deemed safe, often rushed to market by large drug companies more focused on profit than careful research, and then their transformation into street drugs.

The Canadian/Belgian production CRISIS tells its tale through three threads, with different individuals battling the tragic situation from perspectives, story lines that alternate throughout the film. Gary Oldman plays Dr. Tyrone Brower, a university biology professor who also does research for a drug company as a way to fund his lab’s other research, but runs into trouble when he uncovers a problem with the company’s latest painkiller, which is on the verge of FDA approval. Brower is under pressure from the drug company whose research he does but also Dean Talbot (Greg Kinnear) of the university where he works.

Armie Hammer plays Jake Kelly, an undercover DEA agent tracing the illegal movement of opioids across the US – Canadian border. Kelly has infiltrated a Montreal-based drug operation headed by gang boss known as Mother (Guy Nadon). At the same time, he is dealing with his own drug-addicted younger sister Emmie (Lily-Rose Depp). Nicholas Jarecki appears in his own film as Stanley Foster, Jake Kelly’s undercover partner, while Michelle Rodriguez plays Supervisor Garrett, Kelly’s boss at the DEA.

Evangeline Lilly plays Claire Reimann, a recovering opioid addiction, whose addiction started with a prescription after an accident, who is racked with doubts and guilt about that as he raises her son as a single parent, When her son goes missing, she is frantic but when the police suggest her son’s disappearance may be linked to illegal drug trafficking, she decides to uncover the truth.

Nicholas Jarecki’s dramatic thriller with alternating, overlapping stories will remind some of 2005’s CRASH and other overlapping-stories films, although not all of the threads come together so neatly in CRISIS. Still, opioid addiction is such a huge and growing problem that has been overshadowed, like everything else, by the pandemic, so the film takes on a worthy topic

The individuals are fictional but the crisis depicted is quite real. The plot explores the opioid crisis through the whole chain that drives it, including drug companies developing the prescription drugs that are later turned into street drugs, the law enforcement battle against powerful drug runners, and the struggles of those who become addicted through prescription and their families. It is a lot of territory to cover in a single film, and Jarecki does sometimes struggle to keep all the balls in the air, not always completely successfully. Still the film’s important topic, and the parts that do succeed, make the film worthwhile as well as involving entertainment, a good combination.

The film alternates between the three story lines in a balanced fashion, and develops into a thriller of sorts as the complications and twists unfold. Eventually, two of the three threads converge but the lack of integration of the third one, perhaps the most significant one, leaves the film feeling a bit less dramatically balanced than it might have been.

The production was shot in Canada and features some scenic dramatic sequences, particularly the opening one in the snowy mountains as law enforcement chase a young man smuggling drugs across the US-Canadian border. Generally the photography by Nicolas Bolduc is nicely done, and he does a fine job keeping the pace up as the drama moves into a thriller mode.

Acting is very good all around. Unsurprisingly, Gary Oldman is excellent as the scientist caught in a murky dilemma between his ethical standards and practical concerns about keeping his lab running. Under pressure between the drug company that funds his lab and the dean of his college, Oldman gives a moving performance and a man who must sort through his feelings, the facts and potential consequences. Evangeline Lilly is likewise effective as Claire Reinmann, a recovering addict who became hooked on opioids after an injury, whose fragile emotional state is shaken when her son suddenly disappears and the police suggest a link to drugs, a situation that Lilly explores with heartbreaking, nuanced sensitivity in her excellent performance. Even Armie Hammer, who is not in the same acting league as Oldman or Lilly, is well cast in his role as the iron-jawed undercover agent, and does well in the part. He handles both the action hero-type scenes and in the ones requiring more dramatic finesse well, including those with Lilly-Rose Depp, who plays his drug addicted sister.

THE CRISIS strikes the mark unerring accuracy in its exploration of the various elements that fuel the opioid crisis, and provides a timely reminder of this expanding crisis, which may have been pushed off the headlines by the pandemic but has by no means gone away. THE CRISIS is available on demand and on digital starting March 5.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

MANK – Review

Class is now in session for Film History 101. And this will be on the final. Hopefully, that didn’t inspire too many nervous flashbacks, though I always looked forward to the few cinema courses I could take. Now the intro is spot on because this new film is mainly about another film that did make history, for lots of reasons. It truly stood out despite being produced during the second greatest year of Hollywood’s Golden Age (just two years after the prolific 1939). Yes, like 2012’s HITCHCOCK it is a biography of a very creative artist, but it focuses on one seminal work (PSYCHO for that earlier film). Oh, and instead of a director we now shine a much-deserved spotlight on the lowly, neglected writer, much like 2015’s TRUMBO. Well perhaps in this case not too neglected since he shared in the classic film’s only Oscar win. That iconic masterpiece is CITIZEN KANE, and its co-screenwriter is the talented Herman J. Mankiewicz, known to his many friends, and a few foes, as MANK.

Slow fade in on a dusty road near Victorville California early 1940s. A caravan of sedans pulls up to a rustic house just off a dirt road. It’s a place far away from the distractions of “Tinsel-Town”, ideal for the hard-drinking screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz (Gary Oldman). He’s been tasked to pen the movie debut of the current media darling, the 24-year-old “wunderkind” Orson Welles (Tom Burke). Along with “Mank” is one of the project’s producers John Houseman (Sam Troughton), a young typist/transcriber, British “war-bride” Rita Alexander (Lily Collins), and his personal nurse “Fraulein” Frieda (Monica Gossman), an essential aide after an auto accident (he was the unlucky passenger) has encased much of his lower body in plaster. Before leaving, Houseman phones Welles who shortens the deadline from 90 to 60 days. As Mank settles in, his mind recalls incidents from his movie work a decade prior. His nights back then are spent “in his cups” despite the efforts of his wife “poor” Sara (Tuppence Middleton). His hung-over days are confined to the legendary writers’ room at MGM under the watchful eye of its prickly, manipulative figurehead Louis B. Meyer (Arliss Howard). And despite his indulgences he becomes the adored friend and confidant of film star Marion Davies (Amanda Seyfried), not-so-secretly the “kept woman” of newspaper magnate William Randolf Hearst (Charles Dance). As the story bounces from the present to past and back again, Mack attends the lavish parties at Hearst’s San Simeon while learning of his host’s plan (helped by Meyer) to use staged propaganda newsreels to thwart Upton Sinclair’s campaign for governor. Eventually the drawbridge to Hearst Castle is closed to Mank. Could the Welles screenplay be his revenge against his former chums? As Mank denies this, will Davies really believe him? What of the efforts to shut down the production?  Will Mank be banned from the movie biz?

The title role provides a great showcase for the always compelling Oldman who plays Mank almost as a “world-weary” private eye who’d be a fixture in flicks later in that decade. Even in those flashbacks, we know that Mank’s been through enough heartache and disappointment to send most screenwriters off to the pawnshop to “hock” their typewriters. But as “down” as he gets, Mank still has the perfect verbal “burn”, which Oldman tosses off effortlessly. Despite his dour demeanor, Oldman shows us Mank’s humanity whether he’s helping out a panhandling pal or commiserating with screen royalty. Speaking of which, the film’s most delightful surprise is the dazzling turn by Seyfried as Davies. With her bright expressive eyes, she projects a magnetism that captivates everyone around her from lowly laborers to boozy writers to “gazillionaires”. Seyfried conveys her mischievous wit but really gets to the heart of her character as she opens up about her “beau”. It seems that the “princess locked in the tower” (she keeps a radio-telephone stashed away for private calls) is really in love with her “captor”. Let’s hope this leads to more frequent film roles for the talented Ms. S. As for the other women in Mank’s life, Collins is good as the no-nonsense assistant, but the role seems too similar to the secretary in Oldman’s DARKEST HOUR. Much the same can be said for Middleton who tries, often in vain, to steer her hubby away from her indulgent impulses. Troughton is perfectly prim and pompous as the stuffy Houseman, while Burke is the ultimate “big dog” treating every room as his theatre, as the bellowing Welles. And happily, there are some great villains for Oldman to confront. Howard’s Meyer projects a “kindly grandpa” persona that masks a cruel vindictive “penny-pincher”, while Dance is a looming, smiling cobra as Hearst, ready to strike at any affront, his venom poisoning his decadent opulent surroundings.

Director David Fincher, working with the screenplay by his late father Jack, has crafted a wonderful homage to the legacy of KANE while utilizing many of its techniques (the slow fade to black, focused foregrounds and backgrounds, high angle shots, etc.). Though there are a few movie trivia slip-ups (no Wolfman in the early 30s), most of the film lore is solid. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross contribute a lush, haunting score that has just a hint of Herriman. But the film’s greatest asset (aside from Oldman and Seyfried) may be the superb silvery black and white cinematography by Erik Messerschmidt with its languid deep shadows shattered by blazing white shafts of sunlight. He captures the glorious kitsch of Simeon while hinting that it may be a gilded gold prison in the future. The visuals make some of the pacing problems a bit more bearable. The whole “sacrificial lamb” to the power-grabbing duo subplot feels heavy-handed and obvious. Plus the countless scenes of a shuffling, drunken chain-smoking Mank with his comb-over dangling over one eye as he slurs sloshy soliloquies becomes repetitive as the film lurches slowly forward. At least we have ample time to gaze longingly at the fabulous fashions and aristocratic autos of the long-gone gods of the screen. MANK is an adoring, slightly bloated, look back at the creative process that birthed a true piece of cinema that will inspire generations to come.

3 out of 4

MANK is playing in select theatres and streams exclusively on Netflix beginning Friday, December 4th, 2020.

Gary Oldman is MANK – Starts Today at The Hi-Pointe Theater in St. Louis

“You cannot capture a man’s entire life in two hours. All you can hope is to leave the impression of one.”

The Hi-Pointe Theater, at 1005 McCausland Ave in St. Louis, is the best place to see movies. Gary Oldman inMANK opens there Tonight November 19thThe Hi-Pointe’s site can be found HERE.

MANK follows screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz’s tumultuous development of Orson Welles’ iconic masterpiece Citizen Kane (1941).

Gary Oldman and Olga Kurylenko in THE COURIER Coming to Blu-ray January 21st

The nonstop action-thriller The Courier arrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital), DVD, and Digital January 21 from Lionsgate. This film is currently available On Demand.

Starring Academy Award winner Gary Oldman (2017, Best Actor, Darkest Hour) and Olga Kurylenko, a female motorcycle courier must fight off a sadistic crime boss’ henchmen in order to protect the one witness that can bring him down. The film also stars Dermot Mulroney. The Courier Blu-ray and DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $21.99 and $19.98, respectively.

This intense action-thriller unfolds in real time as two embattled souls fight for their lives. Academy Award® winner Gary Oldman (The Dark Knight) stars as a vicious crime boss out to kill Nick, the lone witness set to testify against him. He hires a mysterious female motorcycle courier (Olga Kurylenko, Quantum of Solace) to unknowingly deliver a poison-gas bomb to slay Nick. But after she rescues Nick from certain death, the duo must confront an army of ruthless hired killers in order to survive the night.

First Look Preview of THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW Stars Amy Adams, Gary Oldman And Julianne Moore

Starring Amy Adams, Gary Oldman, Anthony Mackie, Wyatt Russell, Brian Tyree Henry, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Julianne Moore, here’s a first look at the brand new trailer for THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW.

Directed by Joe Wright (DARKEST HOUR), an agoraphobic child psychologist befriends a neighbor across the street from her New York City brownstone, only to see her own life turned upside down when the woman disappears and she suspects foul play. A stellar ensemble cast brings Tracy Letts’ screenplay based on the gripping, best-selling novel to life, where shocking secrets are revealed, and no one-and nothing-is what it seems.

THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW seems like an updated adaptation of the classic 1954 REAR WINDOW from Alfred Hitchcock. The stellar cast should bring in moviegoers looking for something after BLACK WIDOW opens at the beginning of May.

Twentieth Century Fox’s upcoming psychological suspense thriller opens in cinemas on May 15, 2020.

Amy Adams in “The Woman In The Window.”

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WAMG Giveaway: Win MARY on DVD – Stars Gary Oldman and Emily Mortimer

RLJE Films, a business unit of AMC Networks, will release MARY on November 26, 2019 on DVD and Blu-ray.  MARY stars Academy Award winner Gary Oldman (Darkest HourThe Dark Knight), Emily Mortimer (Mary Poppins Returns, Lars and the Real Girl), Manuel Garcia-Rulfo (Murder on the Orient Express, The Magnificent Seven), Stefanie Scott (Beautiful Boy, Insidious: Chapter 3), Chloe Perrin (“Single Parents,” The Diabolical), Douglas Urbanski (RoboCop, The Social Network), with Jennifer Esposito (“The Boys,” “NCIS) and Owen Teague (It, It Chapter 2). The film was directed by Michael Goi (“American Horror Story,” “Scream Queens”) and was written by Anthony Jaswinski (The Shallows, “Kristy”). RLJE Films will release MARY on DVD for an SRP of $29.96 and Blu-ray for an SRP of $29.97.

Now you can win the Win the DVD of MARY. We Are Movie Geeks has two copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment below telling us what your favorite movie that stars Gary Oldman . (mine’s SID AND NANCY). It’s so easy!

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

In MARY, David (Academy Award Winner Gary Oldman) is a struggling blue-collar captain looking to make a better life for his family. Strangely drawn to an abandoned ship that is up for auction, David impulsively buys the boat, believing it will be his family’s ticket to happiness and prosperity. But soon after they embark on their maiden journey, strange and frightening events begin to terrorize David and his family, causing them to turn on one another and doubt their own sanity. With tensions high, the ship drifts off course, and it becomes horrifyingly clear that they are being lured to an even greater evil out at sea.

MARY DVD and Blu-ray include the following bonus features:

·       The Making of Mary

·       A Family At Sea: The Cast of Mary


THE LAUNDROMAT – Review

Review by Stephen Tronicek

Steven Soderbergh’s The Laundromat makes a damning case for why the filmmaker is starting to become outdated. Slick, cool, and progressive in 1989, Soderbergh broke onto the scene with sex, lies and a videotape. That film is a fantastic work, one that stood out with a risque but honest view of sexuality. Nowadays, it’s still effective but the veneer of that honesty has worn slightly thin. Maybe part of Soderbergh is stuck in 1989.

Now, of course we can’t just blame him. The Laundromat, written by Scott Z. Burns (responsible for a few good Soderbergh movies and this year’s The Report) is ill conceived from the get go. Following a mystery that never gets solved, Meryl Streep does her best to give life to Ellen Martin, a woman whose husband died on a cruise boat. The aftermath lead her to an offshore scheme that bled her of any of the settlement money that could give her some type of closure. The managers of that scheme? Jurgen Mossat (Gary Oldman) and Ramon Fronseca (Antonio Banderas), two Panama lawyers keeping many billionaires money safe. 

Where The Laundromat goes wrong is that for all the talk of the meek inheriting the earth and the importance of financial reform, the view of the filmmaker and writer seems to be on the side of the wealthy that have put us in this position. Ellen is a wealthy woman who never suffers the consequences of what happened. Mossak and Fonseca, are framed charmingly and straightforward. The film upon multiple occasions tells you, “This is simply the way the world works”…and yet there never seems a shred of empathy for anybody. Nobody actually gets out of this unscathed…not even the director. Oldman and Banderas smile and tell us that, “…the director of this film has 5 (offshore) type accounts,” and expect us to be fascinated. I’m not. You just gave me the middle finger and asked me to clap for you. 

This is exacerbated by the scope of the script. Burns and Soderbergh frame the financial woes of the world through certain vignettes: one taking place in a small island firm, one taking place at the villa of an adulterous millionaire, and one taking place in China (the implications of which are even more disturbing when you see how nationalistic it seems). Each of these are nihilistic exercises, showing the horrible nature of man, but not are engaging or ironic in anyway. Soderbergh’s (Peter Andrews and Mary Ann Bernard) dryest photography and editing in ages assures that everything is presented as flatly as possible, adding no nuance to the proceedings. By the time the movie is over, it’s like somebody has but a bag over your senses wiping them out. 

…and that’s before you get to the call to action. The ending of the film is Streep stripping out of brownface and asking us to accept the artifice of the movie. She says to the camera that financial reform must come to the country and that we’ll all suffer if it doesn’t. She then assumes the pose of the statue of Liberty, holding a copy of the script. 

This sequence is the biggest middle finger of them all. The creatives first show us their capacity for racism, then tell us their intentions are good…but their not. Afterall, Soderbergh has, “…five of these accounts.” Is this satire? I suppose. It sat wrong with me though and made me rethink the flawed legacy of Steven Soderbergh. 

He might have been slick, cool, and progressive then…but the hollowness of his approach is starting to show. 

1/2 of 1 Stsr out of 4

THE LAUNDROMAT is playing in St. Louis exclusively at The Hi-Pointe Backlot

Watch The Trailer for Steven Soderbergh’s THE LAUNDROMAT Starring Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman And Antonio Banderas

Check out the first trailer for director Steven Soderbergh’s THE LAUNDROMAT, starring Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman and Antonio Banderas.

The film will have a platform release starting September 27 in Los Angeles, New York and the UK, additional engagements in U.S. and international cities will rollout October 4 and October 11. THE LAUNDROMAT will be released globally on Netflix on October 18 with an expanded theatrical release in the U.S. and international markets.

When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Academy Award winner Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm and its vested interest in helping the world’s wealthiest citizens amass even larger fortunes. The charming – and very well-dressed – founding partners Jürgen Mossack (Academy Award winner Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Golden Globe nominee Antonio Banderas) are experts in the seductive ways shell companies and offshore accounts help the rich and powerful prosper. They are about to show us that Ellen’s predicament only hints at the tax evasion, bribery and other illicit absurdities that the super wealthy indulge in to support the world’s corrupt financial system.

Zipping through a kaleidoscope of comic detours in China, Mexico, Africa (via Los Angeles) and the Caribbean en route to 2016’s Panama Papers publication – where journalists revealed the secret, leaked documents of Mossack Fonseca’s high-profile patrons – THE LAUNDROMAT is directed by Academy Award winner Steven Soderbergh (Ocean’s Eleven, Magic Mike, High Flying Bird) with a screenplay by Scott Z. Burns (The Informant!, The Report), adapted from “Secrecy World” by Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter Jake Bernstein.

The film is produced by Lawrence Grey, Gregory Jacobs, Michael Sugar and Burns with a cast that includes Jeffrey Wright, Melissa Rauch, Jeff Michalski, Jane Morris, Robert Patrick, David Schwimmer, Cristela Alonzo, Larry Clarke, Will Forte, Chris Parnell, Nonso Anozie, Larry Wilmore, Jessica Allain, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Matthias Schoenaerts, Rosalind Chao, Kunjue Li, Ming Lo, with James Cromwell and Sharon Stone.

HUNTER KILLER – Review

Okay film fans, buy your ticket, settle into your seat, and grab the armrests as you prepare to submerge! Dive, dive, dive into the murky depths of another underwater adventure (and just hope you don’t become “Spam in the can”). This subset of the war film genre has been cruising the cinemas for well over 75 years, longer if you count the movie adaptations of Jules Verne’s Captain Nemo. The gold sub flick standard might have been the two torpedo blasts from 1958’s RUN SILENT RUN DEEP and 1961’s SF-themed VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA (which spawned a weekly TV series soon after). Things were quiet beneath the waves (well after THE INCREDIBLE MR. LIMPET scuttled the U-boat menace) until the Cold War set 1989 smash THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER which began a 13-year wave of ocean thrillers including CRIMSON TIDE, U-571, and K-19: THE WIDOWMAKER. After some time away, those atomic leviathons are churning up some more water-spouts in the new, post-U.S.S.R. northern oceans in HUNTER KILLER. Oh, the title designates the type of vessel, if you were wondering.

As the film begins, we’re zipping over some truly brutal snow-capped terrain. Ah, but the real story is in the Bering Straight, beneath the floating chunks of ice. A US submarine, the Tampa Bay, is silently following a Russian sub (they better be quiet since they’re in Russian territory). Without warning the Russian sub explodes. As the Tampa Bay scrambles, they realize that a missile is headed there way. The blast echoes all the way to Navy HQ in the states. CJCS Donnegan (Gary Oldman) wants an immediate rescue/investigation. RA Fisk (Common) informs him that the closest sub, the Arkansas is missing its usual Captain. However, an untested but fully cleared captain, Joe Glass, is nearby. Donnegan gives the OK, and Glass (Gerald Butler) cuts his hunting vacation short. Soon Fisk is briefed by NSA chief Norquist (Linda Cardellini) who informs him that a Navy seal team led by Bill Beaman (Toby Stephens) are parachuting into Russia to observe the meeting between President Zakarin and his main naval Admiral, Durov (Michael Gor). The Arkansas returns to the scene of the “incident”, and after evading a Russian sub, finds the remains of the Tampa Bay and the original sunken Russian sub. Video from a drone reveals that the explosion came from the inside. And just what’s that banging sound? Survivors? Glass brings aboard the nearly frozen Russian sub Captain Andropov (Michael Nyqvist) and two of his crew. Back on land, the Special Forces quartet observe more than a meeting. The images sent back to the states reveal Durov staging a coup and kidnapping Zakarin. Donnegen tells the US president that they should go to “Def-Con 4” which could lead to another world war. Fortunately, Fisk and Norquist sell her (that’s right) on another plan: the Seal Team rescues Zakarin and escapes with him via the Arkansas. But the plan hinges on whether Glass can persuade Andropov to guide them past the numerous mines that surround the naval base. Can they form an alliance and pull off this truly impossible mission before the crazed Durov lights the fuse to pulverize the planet?

Perhaps due to the confined sub set, Butler’s usual action flick swagger is thankfully subdued (not the case earlier this year, where his “mucho-macho” attitude stunk up a fairly decent “B” movie-style heist flick DEN OF THIEVES). Still, his growling, pre-mission “pep talk” (“I didn’t go to Annapolis, but I’ve done all of yer’ jobs”) is pretty grating. But he can still believably bark out commands as though he ‘s leading another 300-type charge into battle. And his glowering focus helps direct our attention from all the flashing monitors in the busy control room. In another screen-filled space, Oldman tosses away all his Churchill subtlety to give us another “angry man in command”, a star-studded bully who’s always throwing a tantrum along with insults when folks don’t see things his way (Yosemite Sam with his finger on the big red button). Much calmer (almost to the point of napping) is Common, who is far too tightly wrapped for, well, a rapper (his role in THE HATE U GIVE strikes a better balance in fewer scenes). It’s always a pleasure to see Cardellini pop up on screen (last time was just a few weeks ago as the tough artist in A SIMPLE FAVOR), though she has little to do besides sharing too many secrets and dazzling the guys with her computer skills. Stevens, so good in the Netflix reboot of “Lost in Space”, does more of that tough guy machismo as Beamen who’s a modern take on the Marvel Comics GI Sgt. Fury (minus several “howlers” and the half cigar jutting from the corner of his clenched jaw). The late Nuqvist, unfortunately, has little to do in one of his last screen roles, while Gor elicits a bit of Lugosi-like madness to his role as the power-hungry Durov.

Director Donovan Marsh checks off the list of submarine movie standards (playing all the “hits”) with workman-like proficiency. Steady-cam dashing POV through the tight, crowded corridors? Check. Multiple leaks with spraying bursts of water. Double check, augmented with sparks and sailors bounced from side to side. Plus there’s the “ping…ping’ off of sonar screens, along with countless count-downs (“20 seconds to impact…15”). In addition, we experience some solid tension as the sub navigates some narrow route while evading lotsa’ floating mines. Some of them are sound sensitive, so the crew must try to be silent (while sweating buckets, of course). Guess the mines don’t pick up on the “whirring” motors. Marsh tries to break up the undersea scenes with frequent cuts to US Navy HQ (mainly lots of arguing and staring at screens) and the quartet who can observe all of Durov’s schemes from a tower just a few hundred yards away, an unmanned tower that the bad guys either ignore or just forgot (sensors couldn’t warn of the activity). That’s not the least of the absurdities. Two different characters take bullets to the mid-section, then dive into the cold water, with little discomfort (one is up and about within minutes). These “war games” make for a bloated two hours, but the effects work is pretty solid, with CGI replacing the miniature work of most previous submarine sequences (underwater explosions are darned cool). If you’re a fan of the genre HUNTER KILLER should “float your boat”. For more discerning fans, well for undersea thrills, Mr. Curry AKA AQUAMAN will be making waves in a couple months.

2.5 Out of 5

Submarine Movie Trailer HUNTER KILLER Emerges Starring Gerard Butler, Common And Gary Oldman

Brace for Impact. HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER, CRIMSON TIDE, DAS BOOT, U-571… all great submarine films. Now comes the latest entry into the fleet. HUNTER KILLER.

Check out the official trailer and first poster for Summit Premiere’s HUNTER KILLER starring Gerard Butler, Gary Oldman, Common and Linda Cardellini.

Amid heightened tensions between the US and Russia, a new generation of highly sophisticated nuclear attack subs called hunter killers prowl the murky depths. When the Russian president is captured by his rogue general, an untested American submarine captain (Butler) teams up with an elite group of Navy SEALs to save him. Now the Americans and Russians must work together to avoid worldwide disaster.

Deep under the Arctic Ocean, American submarine Captain Joe Glass (Gerard Butler, Olympus Has Fallen, 300) is on the hunt for a U.S. sub in distress when he discovers a secret Russian coup is in the offing, threatening to dismantle the world order. Captain Glass must now assemble an elite group of Navy SEALs to rescue the kidnapped Russian president and sneak through enemy waters to stop WWIII.

Also starring Oscar® winner Gary Oldman (Best Actor, Darkest Hour, 2017), Common (John Wick: Chapter 2), Linda Cardellini (Avengers: Age of Ultron) and Toby Stephens (Die Another Day), HUNTER KILLER is a high-stakes thriller that unfolds both on land and at sea.

Directed by Donovan Marsh and written by Arne L. Schmidt and Jamie Moss, HUNTER KILLER is based on the book Firing Point written by retired naval officer George Wallace and author Don Keith.

The production of HUNTER KILLER was also fully supported by the United States Navy.

Only In Theaters Nationwide October 26th

Visit the official site: https://hunterkiller.movie/