Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

It is far too feverish

- RASHID IRANI

This adaptation of a pulp thriller by Vince Flynn (who wrote 15 more novels featuring super-agent Mitch Rapp) is never quite as involving as it should have been.

The hero (Dylan O’Brien) is on a mission to slay the terrorists who gunned down his fiancée, but there is no force and even less finesse in this genre flick.

The globe-spanning plot is set in motion when tragedy strikes the vacationin­g couple at a beach in Spain.

Eighteen months later, the angry young man has grown an unkempt beard, become a linguist and infiltrate­d the lair of the killer terrorists.

Before you can say ‘gotcha’, a band of CIA operatives has sabotaged his gameplan and killed all the jihadists. End of film? You wish.

Director Michael Cuesta (Kill the Messenger) wallows in bloodletti­ng and scenes of graphic violence. For a shade of difference, the deputy director of the CIA is portrayed by an African-American actress (Sanaa Lathan).

The obligatory female interest is provided by a Turkish liaison (Shiva Negar). A zigzag subplot about a stolen nuclear device only serves to annoy.

The only thing that makes the film watchable at all is the supercharg­ed performanc­e by Michael Keaton in the role of trainer / mentor.

Recommende­d only for desperate action junkies.

 ??  ?? Michael Keaton in American Assassin.
Michael Keaton in American Assassin.
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