The Herald (South Africa)

Action romp loses the plot

Remorseles­sly cool Theron doesn’t reveal much else

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(6) ATOMIC BLONDE. Directed by: David Leitch. Starring: Charlize Theron, James McAvoy, John Goodman, Til Schweiger, Eddie Marsan, Sofia Boutella, Toby sJones. Showing at: Baywest. Reviewed by: Tim Robey.

ASTARTLING­LY attractive French spy (Sofia Boutella) tells actress Charlize Theron “I take pleasure in the details,” in Atomic Blonde, rememberin­g the latter’s drink of choice – stoli on ice – as they rendezvous in a Berlin nightclub.

Details are everything in this lusciously appointed retro-noir action romp: it gussies up every element of decor and dances its violent way around the furnishing­s. When the two women repair to bed, it isn’t shy, either.

Theron, putting on a British accent as an M16 super-spy called Lorraine Broughton, doesn't just like her vodka on the rocks.

Her favoured rehab, after long and punishing missions smashing goons to kingdom come, is to climb into a bathtub of ice cubes.

With her peroxide locks, flowing white trenchcoat and wholly unimpresse­d manner, she looks like a walking chip of Arctic glacier, ready to freeze you out with a single expression, or ideally throw you down the stairs.

And she does plenty of all this when sent to Berlin undercover just before the collapse of the wall in November 1989.

A fellow British operative has shown up dead and there’s a web of intrigue to disentangl­e with the help of a scuzzy station chief (James McAvoy), who has the deportment and vocab of a louche, Machiavell­i-quoting playboy, but certainly knows his way around.

Derived from a comic book called The Coldest City, the movie is unashamed to flaunt having the coldest star of its day, and Theron – high off that defining moment as Furiosa in Mad Max: Fury Road – gives it the full subzero workout.

The film flicks back and forth between her Berlin adventures and the scars-apparent debrief, throwing up one delicious moment when we cut to her oblivious London boss (Toby Jones) straight after the Boutella sex scene.

“So you made contact with the French operative?” he asks her.

It’s a neat reclaiming of all those cheesy pan-away moments in the James Bond franchise, except it pushes things a lot further, nudity-wise, and none of the men are in on it.

The film is a ridiculous­ly dressy design feast, first and foremost.

Director David Leitch has form here – he was one half of the team who gave us Keanu Reeves as a soul-sick assassin in John Wick – and outdoes himself on every imaginable superficia­l level.

The lighting scheme, all blue and pink neons bouncing off hair and glass, is pure Nicolas Winding Refn, but consistent­ly dazzling nonetheles­s, while the soundtrack lays on a prepostero­us buffet of 1980s synth-pop masterpiec­es – Depeche Mode, New Order, Blondie, The Cure – and makes a solid case for them being the peak of all human creative endeavour.

There’s a lot the film misses: the palpable melancholy of a Wick, the tortured conscience of a Bourne. It’s content to kick ass – fine – but needs constant soundtrack injections to keep its adrenaline going, and often feels like a whole load of signifiers in search of a soul. You could try and argue it means something about a changing world order, but you’d really be stretching like mad.

Besides, Theron would have no truck with it: she’s decided to play a character so remorseles­sly cool it’s as if the film itself is banned from getting to know her. – The Telegraph

 ??  ?? ICE MAIDEN: Charlize Theron plays an M16 super-spy called Lorraine Broughton in ‘Atomic Blonde’
ICE MAIDEN: Charlize Theron plays an M16 super-spy called Lorraine Broughton in ‘Atomic Blonde’

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