The November Man (DVD REVIEW)
The November Man
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Vintage Brosnan in Serpentine
Spy Thriller
Director Roger Donaldson is
probably most closely associated with No Way Out, one of the best espionage
thrillers ever made. The accomplished Australian revisits the genre with The November Man, though this picture pales in comparison
to his ingenious, 1987 classic.
Nevertheless, Roger has
crafted another labyrinthine, cat-and-mouse caper which miraculously manages to
keep you on the edge of your seat despite an often-incoherent plotline,
slapdash action sequences, and an inscrutable cast of characters with difficult
to discern motivations. Overall, the adventure amounts to a dizzying
head-scratcher which takes you on one helluva roller coaster ride, even if it
might take a scorecard to keep the profusion of players straight.
Based on the Bill Granger
best seller “There Are No Spies,” the movie stars Pierce Brosnan in the title
role as Peter Devereaux, an ex-CIA Agent once code named “The November Man.”
While he retired to Switzerland
five years ago, it doesn’t take much to coax him out of the rocking chair to
help extract Natalia (Mediha Musliovic), a Russian double agent ready to come
in out of the proverbial cold.
After all, they share a
secret past which produced Lucy (Tara Jevrosimovic), a love child he misses
terribly. However, the prospects of a father-daughter reunion are reduced
significantly when Natalia is shot in the head by a team of assassins led by
David Mason (Luke Bracey), Peter’s former protégé in the CIA.
What’s up with that? Did
the Agency really want Natalia dead? Or did David go rogue? These are the
questions left unanswered as Peter accepts another dangerous assignment,
namely, the exfiltration from Moscow of Alice Fournier (Olga Kurylenko).
Alice is a pivotal
witness for the prosecution set to testify in front of a war crimes tribunal
about all the atrocities committed in Chechnya by Arkady Federov (Lazar
Ristovski). Trouble is Federov is Russia’s ruthless President-elect
and isn’t about to let some social worker abort his rendezvous with destiny.
So, it’s not long after making Alice’s acquaintance that
Peter realizes she has no shortage of angry adversaries, both Soviet, such as
Federov’s acrobatic henchwoman (Amila Terzimehic), and American, like the CIA
mole giving David his marching orders. Regardless, the peripatetic pair proceed
to leave a messy trail of bloody bodies behind as they pick up long-lost Lucy
before making a daring escape to the West.
Vintage Brosnan!
Very Good (2.5 stars)
Rated
R for rape, profanity, sexuality, nudity, graphic violence and brief drug use
In
English and Russian with subtitles
Running
time: 109 minutes
Distributor:
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Blu-Ray
Extras: The Making of November Man; Bringing Belgrade to the Big Screen;
Bronson Is Back; and feature commentary by the director, producer and Pierce
Brosnan.
To
see a trailer for The November Man, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X0-uN5l1Z2I
To
order a copy of The November Man on Blu-ray, visit:
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