DOWN ON HIS LUCK
ACTION HERO G.I. JOE IS BACK ON THE BIG SCREEN BUT THE TITULAR FIGHTER’S QUEST FOR REVENGE MAY LEAVE YOU COLD
SNAKE EYES: G.I. JOE ORIGINS (12A) ★★III
IN A game of craps, a shooter has a one-in-36 chance of rolling snake eyes – double ones – with a pair of dice.
The probability that audiences will enjoy the rough and tumble of this origin story is considerably higher, but far from a certainty.
Arriving eight years after the deeply disappointing G.I. Joe: Retaliation, this rumbustious reboot of the film franchise sharpens its blade on the tragic backstory of a masked, sword-wielding commando from Hasbro’s popular line of G.I. Joe toy figures dating back to the mid-1960s.
Henry Golding dabbles with an American accent depending on the gravity of the scene: the greater Snake Eyes’ inner turmoil, the more likely he is to slip into his British purr, which set hearts aflutter in Crazy Rich Asians.
Physically, he is more than a match for intricately choreographed fight sequences and chases, performing many of his own stunts as part of an acrobatic international cast that includes Indonesian martial arts whirlwind Iko Uwais from The Raid films.
Orphaned underground fighter Snake Eyes (Golding) is haunted by the murder of his father (Steven Allerick), whose fate was decided on the roll of rigged dice.
Power-hungry Yakuza boss Kenta (Takehiro Hira) vows to deliver the cold-blooded killer (Samuel Finzi) to Snake Eyes in exchange for unerringly loyal service. The brawler complies until he is ordered to assassinate the kingpin’s cousin, Tommy (Andrew Koji), heir to the Arashikage clan of noble warriors.
In gratitude, Tommy spirits away his saviour to Tokyo to meet the current clan leader: his grandmother Sen (Eri Ishida).
With Tommy’s encouragement,
Snake Eyes faces three fiendish challenges administered by Hard Master (Uwais) and Blind Master (Peter Mensah), which are designed to strip away ego, anger and fear.
Head of security Akiko (Haruka Abe) observes the challenger with cold, suspicious eyes. Meanwhile, a high-ranking member of the Cobra terrorist organisation, The Baroness (Ursula Corbero), arrives in Japan to pilfer the Arashikage clan’s greatest treasure.
Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins milks every drop of angst from the lead character’s desire for vengeance, evidenced by Golding furrowing his brow or brooding, rather than flexing muscles or scything through enemies.
Robert Schwentke’s Frenetic editing of fight scenes is an ordeal for the eyes but a centrepiece skirmish on a moving two-level car carrier is thrilling.
Corbero’s slinky archvillain seems more likely to fulfil fantasies in Christian Grey’s red room than mastermind a plot to undermine western democracy.
Roll the dice and press your luck.
In cinemas now