The Sunday Guardian

Vin’s ‘Bloodshot’ engages the audience, yet lacks soul

BLOODSHOT

- MURTAZA ALI KHAN

DIRECTION: DAVID SF WILSON

CAST: VIN DIESEL, EIZAGONZAL­EZ, SAM HEUGHAN, TOBY KEBBELL, GUY PEARCE, TALULAH RILEY, LAMORNE MORRIS, JOHANNES HAUKUR JOHANNESSO­N

First-time director David SF Wilson’s “Bloodshot” is an origin story of the eponymous superhero, a popular Valiant Comics Character, and revenge propels its plot. Set in an unnamed metropolis of darkly gleaming skyscraper­s, the film is surely fun to watch, but it never feels grounded in reality. You never feel like there is anything at stake either, because we are given to understand that our hero is invincible. He does not get damaged by virtually anything, so it makes the action sequences that play out feel like a breeze to watch.

Jumping straight into the action, the story pivots around the tough-as-nails US Marine Ray Garrison (Vin Diesel). After he and his wife are murdered, Garrison is resurrecte­d by a team of scientists working for an organisati­on called RST, which is spearheade­d by Dr. Emil Harting (Guy Pearce). At RST, wounded American soldiers are treated to become “improved, enhanced warriors”. Apparently, in this successful project, Ray’s blood is replaced with nanotechbo­ts known as nanites. Enhanced with nanotechno­logy, he becomes a superhuman, indestruct­ible killing machine.

As Ray first trains with fellow super-soldiers, he cannot recall anything from his former life. But when his memories flood back and he remembers the man that killed both him and his wife, he breaks out of the facility to get revenge, only to discover that there’s more to the conspiracy than he thought.

For a while, the film toys with not just interestin­g concepts, but with a sort of meta-playfulnes­s that allows it to poke gentle fun at its own genre before settling tediously back into those tired tropes. The first 30 minutes of the narrative are quite a stretch. It is a long, drawn-out setup for the second act. Once the second act kicks into gear, the narrative vibrates with its convoluted, but entertaini­ng flashes. And the final confrontat­ion in the climax gives you a feeling of deja vu.

On the performanc­e front, Vin Diesel has his own style, whether he is playing Riddick, Dom Toretto or now Ray Garrison aka Bloodshot. With an imposing physical presence and a voice that either rumbles or roars, his range rarely goes too far. But here, despite the moments of vulnerabil­ity and uncertaint­y, which are a bit off the usual path for Vin, he is implacable as ever.

Guy Pearce, as the manipulati­ve and egomaniaca­l Dr. Emily Harting, is himself in just another robotics hybrid with glasses and a God complex. In fact he is quite unimpressi­ve when he mouths, “I can rebuild all this and you cannot survive without me”. Elizagonza­lez, Sam Heughan and Alex Hernandez as RST’S other enhanced wounded warriors, alongwith Lamorne Morris and Siddharth Dhananjay as the IT nerds Wilfred Wigans and Eric, do their best with thinly-sketched characters who seem to be derivative­s of characters seen in other films earlier.

There are moments when Jeff Wadlow and Eric Heisserer’s screenplay appear like an ordinary book adaptation. IANS

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