The Bay Chronicle

Plenty to take in as The Accountant steps right out on on the big screen

-

Don’t be fooled by the title –

is violent fun, punctuated by laugh out loud moments and unexpected­ly strong drama.

Surely a franchise starter, the film builds a consistent world that’s at turns realistic and ridiculous, and, in an unusual turn of events, chooses not to ham-fistedly spell every single thing out for its audience.

Fortunatel­y, given how silly it can get.

Despite juggling a potentiall­y fatal number of competing elements – coming across as a Frankenste­ined hybrid of

and with hints of the over-seriousnes­s of Zack Snyder (yet somehow in a good way) – whether by accident or design, strikes an ever-watchable balance.

As his character – a highfuncti­oning autistic accountanc­y whiz and arsekicker – suggests, Affleck has plenty to work with, including the challenge of not going full Simple Jack with his performanc­e.

He’s not terribly successful at hiding his movie star charisma behind an affected remove, but is aided considerab­ly by the fact that as Christian Wolff he’s not gunning for an Oscar, but a bunch of bad dudes.

And doing so in the role of someone who’s successful­ly learned to pass as ‘‘Joe average’’ – for the most part.

Though we’re spared a predictabl­e romantic subplot (where it would fit in this longish jumble is anyone’s guess), there’s still plenty to enjoy about Affleck’s screen time with Anna Kendrick, the strongest of a supporting cast that’s almost uniformly underused.

That doesn’t get in the way of enjoying though – its sombre savant is star enough, backed up with solid action sequences and The Accountant (M) Directed by Gavin O’Connor Starring Ben Affleck, Anna Kendrick, John Lithgow

128 mins plenty of interestin­g elements jostling for attention – in a manner that couldn’t be further from rote, risible fare such as the recent sequel. –

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand