Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No. 9, no. 9, no. 9 …

Hobbs & Shaw more of the same, but not nearly as good as predecesso­rs

- DAN LYBARGER

On The Onion’s morning talk show parody, Today Now, they interviewe­d the screenwrit­er behind the latest Fast &

Furious movie. He’s a 5-year-old. Probably not. Chris Morgan, who has penned a lion’s share of the movies, has a profile picture that indicates he’s a middle-aged man. But going by his latest movie, it would have been easy to believe The Onion.

At best, it is fun to watch long series of jaw-dropping, physics-defying

sequences. Morgan’s heroes are thin but likable, and it’s pretty to believe that the world can become a better place thanks to speeding vehicles and massive property destructio­n.

With Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, Morgan seems to have run out of ways to make automobile­s collide and buildings explode. Worse, he runs out ways to make viewers care about characters who are pummeling each other, and he wastes the skills of some talented performers. Director David Leitch (Deadpool 2, Atomic Blonde) knows how to make the silliest of action scenes convincing and exciting, but even he can’t enliven a plot where characters are repeatedly taken hostage because Morgan either sets his watch to abductions or he can’t think of other forms of peril.

For all of my grousing, the idea of pairing lawman Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and freelance leg-breaker Shaw (Jason Statham) is a great idea. Johnson is a former

wrestler, and Statham was a diver on the British National Team. Both have more acting chops than they are normally asked to use, and there seems to be a genuine chemistry and tension between them.

It can be as entertaini­ng to watch them bicker.

Hobbs & Shaw starts off with plenty of opportunit­ies for the two to trade verbal and physical blows, but eventually decides that repeatedly demolishin­g vehicles is more fun. The CIA and MI6 recruit the duo because a terrorist group set on mass genocide are trying to obtain a programmab­le virus that could kill everyone on the planet.

Well, maybe not everyone because a fellow named Brixton (Idris Elba) is the villains’ primary enforcer, and he has an enormous capacity for surviving gunshot wounds. The virus won’t do much to him.

To prevent the killer bug from getting out, an MI6 agent named Hattie (Vanessa Kirby) swipes the sample to keep Brixton from obtaining it. Hobbs and Shaw have an additional reason for catching her and the killer bug. She’s Shaw’s sister.

In the Fast & Furious movies Justin Lin directed, he paced them so expertly that viewers could gaze in wonder at what cars can’t really do without letting viewers stop to think that what’s happening is utter nonsense. Leitch delvers a surplus of pyrotechni­cs, but the redundancy and a lack of snappy banter between explosions mutes some of the fun.

Screenwrit­er Morgan introduces some potentiall­y entertaini­ng ideas and then drops them before they become fun. Hattie and Shaw have a series of schemes they’ve named after ’60s English rockers. These are pretty amusing even if you’re too young to know who Keith Moon was, but Morgan gives up after two, figuring destructio­n porn is his primary objective.

There are some clever codas and some great cameos from Ryan Reynolds and Kevin Hart. If only the thought behind their roles had been invested in the rest of the movie.

 ??  ?? Federal agent Luke Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) teams up with an old adversary in David Leitch’s awkwardly titled action movie Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw.
Federal agent Luke Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) teams up with an old adversary in David Leitch’s awkwardly titled action movie Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw.
 ??  ?? MI6 agent Hattie (Vanessa Kirby) and Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham) discover a deep connection in Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw.
MI6 agent Hattie (Vanessa Kirby) and Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham) discover a deep connection in Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States