Kapiti Observer

Nothing divine about hellish Inferno

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Ron Howard’s workmanlik­e adaptation­s of Dan Brown’s Robert Langdon bestseller­s will never be regarded as paragons of the thriller genre, but I’ll admit to getting a fleeting kick out of Angels and Demons‘ ludicrous plot, which imagined the Illuminati conspiring to blow up the Vatican with an antimatter bomb.

Inferno, the third in the film series, is very much in the same ballpark of crazy, following symbologis­t Langdon (Tom Hanks) as he scrambles through another serpentine trail of cryptic clues and shadowy figures.

This time, saddled with gimmicky memory loss and puzzle-loving doctor Dr. Sienna Jones (Felicity Jones), he’s on a mission to prevent the release of a deadly plague that, according to its grandly deluded billionair­e creator Bertrand Zobrist (Ben Foster), will save humanity by culling 50 per cent of its population.

Prepostero­us pablum from start to finish, Inferno packs apocalypti­c imagery, touristic Italian landmarks, laughable drone chases, convoluted twists and an ill-fitting romantic subplot into its clunky, overstuffe­d two hours.

Any film that features Irrfan Khan dryly quipping while plunging daggers into the back of people’s necks is worth a chuckle or two, but the material is pretty much National Treasure- level, bythe-numbers escapism at this stage.

Hanks is on auto-pilot, Jones fails to convince as the fetching, brainy sidekick, and Howard seems like he’s completely checked out, too frequently resorting to hysterical freneticis­m that fancies Langdon as the Jason Bourne of code- breaking and art history.

Where the previous films fell on the right side of enjoyable airport paperback junkiness, Inferno is mostly just junk. – Aaron Yap

Review

Inferno (M) Directed bt Ron Howard Starring Tom Hanks, Felicity Jones, Ben Foster 121mins

 ??  ?? Inferno packs apocalypti­c imagery, touristic Italian landmarks, laughable drone chases, convoluted twists and an ill-fitting romantic subplot into its clunky, overstuffe­d two hours.
Inferno packs apocalypti­c imagery, touristic Italian landmarks, laughable drone chases, convoluted twists and an ill-fitting romantic subplot into its clunky, overstuffe­d two hours.

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