Sicario: Day of the Soldado
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Feds
Fight Bad Hombres in Gory Border War Sequel
I
can't think of a movie that has ever been more timely. Just as the
debate about the detention of undocumented aliens has reached a
fevered pitch, here we have a film revolving around the dark side of
the border wars.
It
doesn't focus as much on the vast majority of non-violent refugees
entering the country in search of the American Dream as on the "bad
hombres" Donald Trump has repeatedly alluded to since the day he
threw his hat into the ring as a presidential candidate. Although the
film is technically a sequel, one need not have seen the original to
enjoy this heart-pounding adventure.
Directed
by Italy's Stefano Sollima (Suburra) and written by Oscar-nominee
Taylor Sheridan (for Hell or High Water), Sicario: Day of the Soldado
co-stars Josh Brolin and Benicio del Toro reprising their lead roles
as CIA Agent Graver and undercover operative Alejandro Gillick,
respectively.
As
the film unfolds, we find the two being dispatched to Mexico by the
Secretary of Defense (Matthew Modine) to smoke out the human
traffickers smuggling radical Islamists into the U.S. There's an
urgency to their mission, given that some suicide bombers embedded
with Latinos seeking asylum recently snuck across the Rio Grande
before blowing themselves up in a big box store in Kansas City.
Trouble
is, there are too Mexican gangs and too little time to sort out which
one has started exporting terrorist cells. So, instead of searching
for the guilty parties, our heroes secretly kidnap the daughter of a
crime boss hoping that her mysterious disappearance will trigger a
bloody turf war among the cartels competing for control of the
region.
There
is a method to the madness behind abducting Isabela Reyes (Isabela
Moner). After all, her father is the ruthless kingpin who ordered the
massacre of Gillick's family in Sicario 1.
The
ruse works for awhile, but the plot thickens when the Mexican
government catches wind of the spies' scheme. The U.S. disavows any
connection to them, a la Mission: Impossible, and suddenly it's each
man for himself in a harrowing struggle to escape back to the States
by any means necessary.
A
riveting, rough-edged, political thriller not to be missed!
Rated R for profanity, graphic violence and bloody images
In English and Spanish with subtitles
Running time:122 minutes
Production Studios: Black Label Media / Rai Cinema / Thunder Road Pictures
Distributor: Columbia Pictures
To see a trailer for Sicario: Day of the Soldado, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIMChzE_aCo
No comments:
Post a Comment