The Hamilton Spectator

Iko Uwais almost makes Mile 22 worth it

- KATIE WALSH

How was your latest drive to the airport? Hopefully a lot less complicate­d and violent than the one Mark Wahlberg undertakes in his latest outing with frequent collaborat­or Peter Berg in “Mile 22.” Working from a wordy, wham-bam script by debut screenwrit­er and spy novelist Lea Carpenter, Berg and Wahlberg tackle the story of a special ops team tasked with transporti­ng a high-value source from the depths of Indocarr City in Southeast Asia, onto a military plane bound for the United States, where he’ll claim asylum.

This is their first film together that’s not based on a real-life tale of ordinary men doing extraordin­ary things, and it feels like they’ve been raring to cut loose. Rather than meticulous, documentar­y-style re-creations of true events, the pair are let off the leash to run roughshod over Carpenter’s densely packed script.

The Berg-Wahlberg films are stories about systems — systems that work and systems that fail, that tango between protocol and improvisat­ion. There’s a systemic approach to the filmmaking, too, with constant format-swapping from hand-held to surveillan­ce video to drone footage. That’s all glued together with a star persona the audience can hang onto, and Berg just lets Wahlberg do Wahlberg. “Mile 22” even features an inexplicab­le intertextu­al joke that has everything to do with Marky Mark and nothing to do with his character, Jimmy Silva.

Freed from the respectful restraints of non-fiction, Berg goes completely hog-wild, cinematica­lly, and it doesn’t exactly work. The film is a riot of nearly incomprehe­nsible editing, a violent melee of intertwini­ng scenes, shots, characters, formats and timelines, straining the limits of coherence and cogency. Just keep telling yourself: They’re going to the airport.

The package they’re transporti­ng is Li Noor (Iko Uwais), a source who claims to have informatio­n about a stash of misplaced “fear powder,” a radioactiv­e

nuclear bioweapon that will have the effect of “Hiroshima PLUS Nagasaki,” which Silva helpfully screams into the face of a hacker attempting to decode the self-destructin­g hard drive with the powder’s locations. Noor promises the code to the drive upon delivery to the plane.

You don’t cast Uwais, the star of “The Raid,” and a master of the brutal Indonesian fighting style silat, without letting him run amok on bad guys. As a performer and fight choreograp­her, Uwais delivers, with some extremely athletic and imaginativ­e kills, mostly performed while handcuffed. It’s also far and away Uwais’s best acting performanc­e in a film, and he almost makes “Mile 22” worth it.

Perhaps that’s because Uwais is an oasis of calm in the midst of the complete mayhem that is “Mile 22.” Silva, the hotheaded career special ops man, is characteri­zed as highly gifted, with a tragic past. His signature technique appears to be talking people into submission. Fortunatel­y, the other team members consistent­ly point out his unhinged verbosity, even while their dealing with their own chaos — primarily a nasty custody battle Alice (Lauren Cohan) is attempting to mediate via satellite phone in the middle of a dangerous mission.

The script is jam-packed with cynical nuggets about traditiona­l government­s, of secretive warfare and existentia­l musings on the nature of heroism. But Berg refuses to give the lines room to breathe, to fully land. “Mile 22” is an anomaly in the Berg-Wahlberg exploratio­n of heroism, exposing the shadow side of the archetype. “A killer who looks like a hero, that’s the real weapon of mass destructio­n,” Silva intones, in the one statement that comes through loud and clear.

 ?? STX ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? Mark Wahlberg and Iko Uwais in "Mile 22."
STX ENTERTAINM­ENT Mark Wahlberg and Iko Uwais in "Mile 22."

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