The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Film reviews:

Red Sparrow

- TJMckay

Jennifer Lawrence gives all of herself – physically and emotionall­y – to the demanding title role of this high-stakes game of post-Cold War cats and mice, torn from the pages of Jason Matthews’s award-winning novel.

The Oscar winner exposes every inch of her body in scenes of masterful seduction and sickening subjugatio­n, including multiple sexual assaults and stomach-churning bouts of torture.

It’s certainly not a film for the squeamish – the camera lingers on the aftermath of snapped bones and one sadistic sequence involving a skin grafting device is the stuff of nightmares.

Lawrence weathers these bonecrunch­ing blows, then shatters her character’s soul to smithereen­s when she thinks no-one is looking, in the service of a tightly woven narrative, threaded with betrayal and daring double-crosses.

Crucially, it’s predominan­tly women who decide grim fates, employing guile and intelligen­ce to outwit men in suits and military uniforms, who have grown fat and complacent on the illusion that they wield power.

Dominika Egorova (Lawrence) is a prima ballerina at the Bolshoi Theatre who pirouettes to finance the medical care of her mother (Joely Richardson).

The dancer suffers a horrendous injury on stage and three months later, as she hobbles through recovery, Dominika receives an unwelcome visit from her uncle Vanya (Matthias Schoenaert­s), deputy director of the Russian Intelligen­ce Service.

He press-gangs his niece into the topsecret Sparrow project, which moulds attractive recruits into weaponised assets to strike at the heart of Western government­s.

Before Dominika can complete her training, she is despatched to Budapest to dupe seasoned CIA operative Nathaniel Nash (Joel Edgerton), the only person who knows the identity of a mole codenamed Marble within the Kremlin.

Nash is wise to the Russian plan and believes he can turn Dominika against her motherland.

Red Sparrow is a muscular and engrossing thriller which revels in the tantalisin­g disconnect between actions and words. Plot mechanics are well-oiled thanks to Matthews’s source material – the author was a clandestin­e operations officer for the CIA.

Consequent­ly, screenwrit­er Justin Haythe concentrat­es on visualisin­g mind games and daring power plays that leave us in the dark about characters’ ulterior motives. The film soars on the wings of Lawrence’s fearless performanc­e and the sterling support of Edgerton and Rampling, the latter irresistib­ly chilling as Matron of the Sparrow programme, who tutors charges in the art of sexual warfare.

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 ??  ?? Jennifer Lawrence takes the lead role in Red Sparrow.
Jennifer Lawrence takes the lead role in Red Sparrow.

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