Shanghai Daily

Hobbs & Shaw get well-oiled and dirty

- Jake Coyle

ADD an “e’’ and “Hobbs & Shaw” might have been a time-traveling thriller about playwright George Bernard Shaw and 17th century philosophe­r Thomas Hobbes.

Tantalizin­g as such a pairing may have been to the makers of “Fast & Furious,” they have instead opted to, in the franchise’s first spinoff, combine two of the series’ supporting standouts, Dwayne Johnson’s US government agent Luke Hobbs and Jason Statham’s former British agent Deckard Shaw, for another ballet of Buicks and bullets. Probably a wise choice. It’s difficult to imagine the writer of “Pygmalion” careening down the side of a skyscraper in hot pursuit of Idris Elba.

And when it comes to high-octane action spectacles, few are better suited to the task than The Rock and Statham, who both make up with brawn and charisma what they lack in hair. In the “Fast & Furious” franchise, which now numbers eight films and more than US$5 billion in box office, they’ve found a comfortabl­e home.

That friction between Johnson and Diesel was reportedly part of the benefit of this pit stop, without the whole gang, in between continuing “Fast & Furious” adventures. But those off-camera tiffs are also perfect for the speedy but soapy “Fast & Furious” world, where family squabbles and questions of loyalty play out in between death-defying automotive stunts.

If “Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw” has a hard road to travel, it’s because the franchise has consistent­ly ratcheted up its stunt game. One of the real pleasures of the last decade’s blockbuste­r parade has been to watch the “Fast & Furious” movies morph from a more simple LA street-racing tale into an increasing­ly absurd and over-thetop action extravagan­za of muscle cars and muscle, where hot rods don’t just go fast but occasional­ly leap between buildings and parachute from the sky. “Hobbs & Shaw” seeks to answer that age-old question: What do you do for your next act after you’ve blown up a submarine with a Dodge?

The entertainm­ent of “Hobbs & Shaw,” directed by stunt coordinato­r-turned-director David Leitch (“Deadpool 2,” “Atomic Blonde”), rests more with its cast, including its two leads. But just as significan­t are two major new additions: Elba’s villain, a cyborg mercenary named Brixton, and Shaw’s sister Hattie (Vanessa Kirby), an MI6 agent whose theft of a super virus from Brixton sets the globe-trotting plot in motion.

Hobbs and Shaw are called into the save the world, a job they are both eager for. But it’s a partnershi­p they loath. If “Hobbs & Shaw” lacks in memorable stunt work, it tries to make it up with bickering and put-downs between the two, a shtick that vacillates between funny and tiresome. But it’s the kind of stuff Johnson excels at.

They also have reinforcem­ents. Elba’s character, who boasts digital eyes and a self-driving motorcycle, takes the franchise in a more sci-fi direction that doesn’t fit the street-level nature of “Fast & Furious.”

With such titans as Elba and Johnson in the movie, it’s a wonder how smoothly and completely Kirby stakes her claim, too. In a movie full of the expected, she’s a breath of fresh air. Kirby has swiftly proven herself capable of an extraordin­ary range.

The chemistry between the four, along with welcome comic cameos from Ryan Reynolds and Kevin Hart, fuel “Hobbs & Shaw” more than its mostly familiar action scenes and plot turns. It’s a herky-jerky ride, with genial company.

But if ever there was a movie franchise that believes, with operatic fervor, in welloiled machines, it’s “Fast & Furious.”

 ??  ?? Dwayne Johnson (left) and Jason Statham in a scene from “Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw”
Dwayne Johnson (left) and Jason Statham in a scene from “Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw”

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