Criminal
Film
Review
by Kam Williams
Brain-Altered
Convict Chases International Terrorists in High Body-Count, Action
Thriller
CIA Agent
Bill Pope (Ryan Reynolds) was in London on assignment to deliver a
ransom to a computer hacker called the "The Dutchman"
(Michael Pitt) when he was assassinated en route by a terrorist
(Jordi Molla) with a vicious gun moll (Antje Traue). This would
ordinarily be a big loss for the Agency, given the veteran spy's
talents and abilities.
Luckily,
government scientist Dr. Franks has been working on transferring
memories from one brain to another. And while he's been successful in
several attempts with animals, he considers himself five years away
from being ready for human trials.
Nevertheless,
given the emergency, he is instructed to immediately implant Pope's
mind into that of Jericho (Kevin Costner), a death-row inmate in
desperate need of a new lease on life. Next thing you know, the
psychopathic murderer awakens from the experimental surgery raring to
track down The Dutchman as well as the creeps who killed Pope.
That is the
point of departure of Criminal, a sci-fi splatterfest directed by
Ariel Vromen (The Iceman). Curiously, the movie marks Ryan Reynolds'
third venture into the brain swap genre, his previous being last
fall's Self/less. There, however, he played the recipient rather than
the organ donor.
There isn't
much point to my reciting the scatterplot storyline, since it makes
even less sense than the picture's farfetched premise. Still, this
high body-count, action thriller is apt to have a certain appeal to
testosterone-sodden males seeking to satiate their blood lust by
watching folks being blown away in spectacular fashion.
In the
process, the film fritters away the services of an impressive cast
which includes Reynolds, Tommy Lee Jones, Gary Oldman and Kevin
Costner. The film features a fair amount of eye candy, too, in Antje
Traue, Alice Eve, Natalie Burn and Gal Gadot who plays Pope's widow,
Jill. As you might easily imagine, She and her daughter, Emma (Lara
Decaro), are in for the surprise of their lives when hubby/daddy
returns reincarnated as a redeemed convict in need of a loving
family.
A novel
enough spin on the brain switch theme to recommend, provided you're
very willing to suspend disbelief and you've got a strong stomach for
senseless gore.
Good (2
stars)
Rated R for pervasive profanity
and graphic violence.
Running time: 113 minutes
Distributor: Summit Entertainment
To see a trailer for Criminal,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JNfRQ4NBjUU
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