Cape Breton Post

‘We all have to pay for our sins’

Denzel Washington kills in ‘The Equalizer 2’

- BY MARK KENNEDY

You won’t usually find Denzel Washington in a movie sequel. He just doesn’t do them. Something about not wanting to repeat himself. So there must be something special indeed for him to break his own rule for “The Equalizer 2.”

Fans of the first film will instantly know why Washington is drawn to the character of Robert McCall, a quiet middle-aged retired special-ops agent who fiercely believes in justice, likes to help others and dispenses the occasional lethal killing for those deserving.

“We all have to pay for our sins,” he tells a group of very bad guys in the new, highly satisfying edition, before vowing to hunt each one dead. His only regret? He can kill them only once.

“The Equalizer 2 ” reconnects many of the people behind the 2014 debut alongside the always-vital Washington - Antoine Fuqua returns to direct, as does writer Richard Wenk, and actors Bill Pullman and Melissa Leo.

McCall first appeared in the mid-1980s on TV with Edward Woodward playing him as a bit of an English dandy. In the film series, Washington plays McCall as a tad obsessive-compulsive, but not consistent­ly. He’s the kind of guy who brings his own tea bag to a restaurant in a neatly folded napkin and arranges the cutlery just so. But, when prompted, his vision suddenly becomes hyperclear and he meticulous­ly pre-plans every step in taking down a room of thugs, often without a gun. He’s like Monk crossed with Sherlock Holmes.

In the first film, a hooker with a heart of gold pulls McCall out of retirement when she is badly beaten by her pimp. By the end, McCall has blown up most of Boston’s waterfront, exposed a nest of corrupt local cops and systematic­ally executed every member of a Russian gang, even going to Moscow to finish the job.

The second film takes place sometime later, with McCall now a Lyft driver, selectivel­y helping people he encounters. He’s kind to old people (a Holocaust survivor, for extra depth) and little kids, who adore him. He mentors a troubled teen (Ashton Sanders), hoping to steer him away from drug dealing and toward art school. Few people could pull off this cheesy sainthood like Washington, oozing charisma and self-assured masculinit­y.

When a group of smarmy, cocky Wall Street types abuse an intern during a coke-fueled party, Washington drives her to the hospital and then returns to wreck vengeance, slicing one dude with

his own luxury credit card and then taunting his bleeding victims with “I expect a five-star rating.” It takes him a scant 29 seconds to destroy the room full of rich snobs; he times it, naturally.

“The Equalizer” is a guilty pleasure for anyone who enjoys that old-school, blue-collar American chivalric hero with a dark past. The one who was in

“The Quiet Man” and behind the mask in Batman.

He’s cool, with moral clarity and he’s three moves ahead of everyone.

“The Equalizer 2,” a Columbia Pictures release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for “brutal violence throughout, language and some drug content.” Running time: 120 minutes. Three stars out of four.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? This image released by Columbia Pictures shows Denzel Washington in a scene from “Equalizer 2.”
AP PHOTO This image released by Columbia Pictures shows Denzel Washington in a scene from “Equalizer 2.”

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