Cape Breton Post

‘Day of the Soldado,’ as bleak as ‘Sicario’

- BY JAKE COYLE

There’s an oppressive bleakness to the brutal action-thriller “Sicario: Day of the Soldado.” But with faces like Josh Brolin and Benicio del Toro, what are you going to do?

Amid the dust cloud of violence that settles over the “Sicario” sequel, nothing stands out like the furrowed brow of Brolin’s grimace or the cold, worn-out stare of del Toro. They look like gunslinger­s from an Anthony Mann or Sam Peckinpah western, just with heavier ammo and dark sunglasses. With such sunken, worldweary eyes, in the heyday of film noir del Toro and Brolin would have made a killing.

They do plenty of that, too, in “Sicario: Day of the Soldado.” Matt Graver (Brolin) and his cartel lawyer turned undercover pal Alejandro Gillick (del Toro) are again called into action in a black-ops operation along the Mexico border, this time without the benefit of Emily Blunt, who starred in Denis Villeneuve’s “Sicario” (2015).

Blunt played a less experience­d FBI agent with the naivety to be horrified by things that Graver and Gillick wouldn’t bat an eye at - you know, sissy stuff like dozens of decaying corpses stuffed like insulation into a Mexican cartel safe house. No, Graver and just-as-grave Gillick have seen it all. And Blunt’s absence leaves “Day of Soldado” without the mounting sense of dread that defined the first one.

It also lacks the muscular camera work of Villeneuve and cinematogr­apher Roger Deakins. With such missing talent, it would be easy to view “Day of the Soldado” as a cheaper knockoff. Easier, still, considerin­g the movie’s poster - of a gun-toting skeleton draped in a flag - most resembles a Guns N’ Roses album cover.

It’s better than that, but not by much. Stefano Sollima (“Gomorrah”) steps in to direct a script by Taylor Sheridan, whose neo-westerns (“Hell or High Water,” ”Wind River“) have made him the genre’s best new hope. Sheridan wrote ”Sicario,“too, which sought to modernize the drug-war thriller to catch it up to the lethal battles of today’s cartels.

But in its ballet of SUVS sweeping across the border, “Sicario” mostly stood for a ruthless, borderless American power equaling the ultraviole­nce of a new era, with all the moral doubt that accompanie­s such a fight. “Day of the Soldado” begins with a similar stab at political relevance. A supermarke­t in Kansas City is attacked

by a swarm of suicide bombers, the last of whom we watch detonate his vest just as a mother and child are trying to tiptoe past.

Sheridan and Sollima could easily defend the imagery: This is indeed a not uncommon happening. But it’s a sensationa­list way to show it. Is there anyone left who doesn’t understand the horror of terrorism?

It’s believed the bombers were jihadis who infiltrate­d the country by slipping through the Mexican border. Told that the cartels control the traffickin­g of migrants over the border, the Secretary of Defence (Matthew Modine) opts to clandestin­ely prompt a war between two cartels. Graver’s plan is to kidnap the 12-year-old daughter of a cartel kingpin to kick-start the war.

“There are no rules this time,” Graver tells Gillick, even if it’s unclear how much Graver ever heeded the rules in the first place.

 ?? RICHARD FOREMAN, JR./SONY PICTURES VIA AP ?? This image released by Sony Pictures shows Benicio Del Toro, left, and Josh Brolin in “Sicario: Day of the Soldado.”
RICHARD FOREMAN, JR./SONY PICTURES VIA AP This image released by Sony Pictures shows Benicio Del Toro, left, and Josh Brolin in “Sicario: Day of the Soldado.”

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