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An average movie

Posted : 11 years, 11 months ago on 26 May 2012 07:26

Even though I did like 'Taken', I still think it was rather overrated. Still, I was rather curious to see Pierre Morel's following directing effort, even though, this time, his new flick didn't get the same positive reception. Well, to my surprise, I actually really enjoyed this movie, at least the 1st hour. I mean, the plot was rather pedestrian and even though the action scenes were decent, it was nothing I haven't seen 100 times before. In fact, the one thing I really enjoyed was Charlie Wax. Indeed, JohnTravolta was already pretty bad-ass in his previous movie ('The Taking of Pelham 123') but, here, he definitely took it to the next level. Seriously, the guy kicked some serious ass and he made me laugh so many times. Unfortunately, during the last 30 minutes, the whole thing lost some steam and it was pretty obvious that the makers got lazy as the ending was just a succession of endless and boring action scenes and some sentimental crap. It was too bad because, before that, it was a really entertaining action flick with Travolta completely stealing the show with some awesome one-liners. Anyway, to conclude, even though it was nothing really amazing, it was still a fun action flick, much better than I expected it to be, and it is definitely worth a look.ย 



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From Paris With Love

Posted : 13 years, 10 months ago on 14 June 2010 04:33

*Spoiler Alert*



James Reese is a low level C.I.A operative and would love nothing more then to become a special agent. Reese gets his chance when he is asked to help out special agent Charlie Wax. Reese must drive Wax wherever he needs to go, and make sure that Wax is able to stop a terror cell before it is too late. Reese has more then he bargained for while working with Wax, but if he can get the job done and clear his name in 48 hours he may just get the promotion he always wanted.

It is clear to see why people like this film. Travolta is witty, Wax is over the top and attempts to be a badass all the while maintaining this likeable down to earth quality. Wax is not the typical C.I.A agent, snorting cocaine, waving guns and shooting anyone that stands in his way. That is the way the character appears to anyone who just took this film for entertainment purposes (which is not a bad thing). Perhaps I just find that they cannot create unique characters anymore, Wax is just a mix of all of the wall agents that have been created in the past. His live-by-my-own rules method has been used before, plenty of times, and will continue to be used in future films about characters of the same nature. Wax is just another agent who swears and bends the rules a little too often and at entertainment value I guess that is somewhat pleasing.

From Paris with Love tries to have awkward comedic moments between the confident Wax and the nervous James Reese. They would have worked had From Paris with Love been an action comedy. Yet somehow they managed to add really interesting comedy with what was supposed to be really intense drama and it just does not work. With a film there has to be a boundary where the comedy or the drama becomes the primary genre. Yes we have all watched those overly awkward dramatic scenes that are meant to carry some comedy in them as well. But a film is supposed to make you feel something, it is supposed to target a central emotion (by no means I am telling people how they should feel, because we all come out of a certain film feeling differently) but each film has an intended emotion on which it builds the foundation of its story. A comedy film is not supposed to make us feel sad and drama most likely is not intending to make us feel happy. With From Paris with Love it is tough to tell which one they wanted to be the focus, because even the ending was almost bitter-sweet. Most Hollywood directors have yet to find the perfect balance (outside of the romantic comedy genre that is). I am excited to see the first dramatic-comedy action that finds the perfect balance; it will surely be a crowd pleaser.

Jonathan Rhys Myers did little to help the film at all. His character of James Reese was a hopeless romantic who was oblivious to his dangerous surroundings. Reese was supposed to be an intelligent man and there was no real evidence of that in the film. Perhaps that does not fall entirely on Rhys Meyers but his acting did not help out the character at all. Reese wanted to be a big shot without actually having to do the big shot work. There is nothing valuable in that type of character. The worst thing of all was how Wax kept insinuating that romance would be the death of Reese and it turned out to be his girlfriend that was setting him up for information. Which at this point Reese gets this new found ability to shot and stand up for himself killing the one person he supposedly cared for the most. Should it not have been more difficult then just not being able to talk it out? Most people would have been frozen and at any other moment in the film he would not have been able to pull the trigger.

From Paris with Love is entertaining if that is all you take it as. By far not a bad film, just a film with faults like any other.


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Knows what it is, and does a good job of being it!

Posted : 14 years, 1 month ago on 26 March 2010 07:59

"This motherfucker hates Americans so much, even though we saved his country's ass in not only one world war but two, he still won't let me through with my cans!"


While the title of From Paris with Love may imply that it's a romantic comedy featuring the Eiffel Tower, the title is in fact a James Bond homage, and the production is a hardcore, no-holds-barred action flick which arrives courtesy of Luc Besson's production factory. For those unaware, Besson is the French filmmaker who produces American action films with far more verve than American filmmakers themselves. Not long ago, Besson and director Pierre Morel teamed up for the surprise hit Taken, and From Paris with Love marks another Besson/Morel collaboration. But while Taken was a gritty, hard-hitting actioner, From Paris with Love is a straight-up cartoon; an exaggerated cocktail of two-dimensional villainy, verbal bluster, mayhem, John Woo-esque action set-pieces and an over-the-top John Travolta as a cocky government operative tracking down an array of terrorists in the heart of France. Intellectually, the movie is flat as a pancake, but on a visceral level it's extremely involving. The film knows precisely what it is, and does a damn good job of being it.



The story is at once incomprehensible and expendable, but it's sufficient to drive the characters from Point A to Point B, which is all that matters in an action flick. In the film, Travolta's character of Charlie Wax is a profane American killing machine who's paired up with James Reece (Myers); a mild-mannered aid to the U.S. Ambassador in Paris with large aspirations. By the time Wax and Reece have known each other for a mere hour, the body count has already started to mount considerably. At first, Wax claims he's taking down a bunch of drug dealers responsible for the death of the Secretary of Defence's daughter, but his real mission is soon revealed: to eliminate a terrorist cell before the members launch an attack.


After 2004's District B13 and the recent Taken, director Pierre Morel has positioned himself as a superior action director. He has a masterful touch when it comes to pace, and From Paris with Love benefits greatly from such exhilarating acceleration. After a slow opening, the film takes off like a champion racehorse once Wax enters the film, as the screenplay by Adi Hasak (Shadow Conspiracy) lines up a series of unsavoury characters - all of whom are one-dimensional stereotypes, of course - for Wax and Reese to ice during their fast-paced trip around the city. However, the problem is that it takes a little too long for the film to hits its stride. The first 20 minutes are genuinely lousy, even by the admittedly low standards to which the movie was aspiring. In action flicks, the segues bridging the action tend to suck, and From Paris with Love is no exception. As the film establishes James Reece, it's frankly boring, and the tone is out-of-place when compared to the light-hearted action which pervades the film's final hour.



Thankfully, after the 20-minute point, the movement of Morel's direction is enthralling; leaping from location to location, staging shootouts and action set-pieces with a cartoonish quality to match Travolta's performance. Even if Morel appears to be on autopilot, he nonetheless delivers in each and every set-piece, sending bullets flying all over the place like it's nobody's business. As a matter of fact, the action evokes the spirit of John Woo movies. It's such a relief to watch a modern action flick containing action that has been edited to ensure an audience knows what's going on at any given time, as opposed to set-pieces that have been cut to incomprehensible ribbons. More pertinently, it's fantastic to see a contemporary actioner in which bad guys get popped in violent, bloody ways, without the cleanliness of the Hollywood-favourite PG-13 rating. As the action intensifies and the explosions keep getting bigger, one gets the feeling that it's building to a big climax. However, From Paris with Love fails in its finale - cheesy character interaction and impassioned speeches have no place in such a film as this.


Luc Besson's films usually feature recognisable Hollywood names, and the A-lister of From Paris with Love is John Travolta who absolutely steals the motherfucking show. Dispersing first-rate one-liners, shooting the hell out of the bad guys and beating the snot out of anyone who challenges him, Travolta truly chews up the scenery with the gusto of a hungry dog attacking a meal. Travolta simply owns the role. He was born to play this role. He's the hook - without him, the movie would be ordinary, but with him, there's always something to enjoy during the film's slowest moments. As legendary YouTube reviewer Jeremy Jahns said, if Jack Bauer (from 24) and Samuel L. Jackson had a child, it would be Travolta's character here. Meanwhile, Jonathan Rhys Meyers was given the unenviable task of playing the straight man to Travolta. Anyone could play this role, and Meyers never stands out as anything but interchangeable. Still, he's watchable at least.



From Paris with Love is one of those movies that consists almost entirely of over-the-top action sequences tenuously linked together by a painfully formulaic, by-the-numbers plotline and two-dimensional characters. From this description, it may sound like a brain-dead blockbuster that doesn't care about how lazy or graceless it is as long as there's sound and fury to temporarily distract the audience. But what prevents From Paris with Love from hopelessly falling into this trap is a great deal of style, energy and personality. It's an enjoyable, lively old-school bullet ballet that's low on CGI, and this separates it from the abominable films of such directors as Michael Bay and McG. It's nonsensical cinematic junk food at its core, but, like the best junk food, it goes down so well and tastes so good that those with a taste for such things should find it absolutely irresistible.

7.1/10



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