Miami Herald

Star power drives mixed-bag COVID caper ‘Locked Down’

- BY JUSTIN CHANG

Is it too soon? It’s already too late to ask, of course, given how many pandemic-themed entertainm­ents (if that’s the word) the movie industry has cranked out. Last year brought a wave of lowbudget, up-to-the-minute freakouts like “Host,” about a Zoom séance gone horribly awry, and the Michael Bay-produced “Songbird,” set in a future doomed by rapidly mutating variants of COVID-19. I tend to believe it’s never too early for artists and entertaine­rs to start making sense of the proverbial Way We Live Now, though with many more such pictures to come on the notso-distant, barely brightenin­g horizon, the more relevant question might not be whether it’s too soon but too many.

The installmen­t is “Locked Down,” a new romantic comedy/heist thriller starring Anne Hathaway and Chiwetel Ejiofor as a couple in the early weeks of COVID cohabitati­on hell. Conceived on the fly last summer, shot in 18 days under strict safety protocols and headed to an HBO Max queue near you, the movie is slicker and starrier than most of its quarantine-themed ilk, though it’s a low-budget lark by Hollywood standards. It certainly gets points for speed, thrift and resourcefu­lness, though

I’m warier than usual of mistaking those qualities for – well, quality. I’m wary in general of making any definitive pronouncem­ents about “Locked Down,” whose charms and irritation­s (and it has its share of both) are largely a matter of timing and perspectiv­e.

It’s possible that this movie, directed by Doug Liman from a bickersome script by Steven Knight, might play better in postpandem­ic times – that with some distance, we’ll look back more fondly on its already quaint jokes about incessant bread-making, pot-banging and toilet paper hoarding. We may also be less inclined to roll our eyes at the sight of two beautiful actors slumming in PJs and bemoaning the horror of being stuck for weeks on end in a comfortabl­e-looking London home. With its steady stream of famous faces popping up on random Zoom calls (they include Ben Kingsley, Ben Stiller, Mindy Kaling and Stephen Merchant), the movie occasional­ly brings to mind a nonmusical version of that celebrity “Imagine” medley that darkened the earliest days of the pandemic, though “Locked Down” is significan­tly longer and significan­tly more endurable.

That’s mainly due to the lead actors, who, despite a wobbly opening stretch and a few too many selfpityin­g, self-justifying monologues, eventually succeed in filling out the thin, snarky sketches they’ve been given to play. Paxton (Ejiofor) and Linda (Hathaway) are a longtime couple who made plans to separate shortly before lockdown began, and who have since spent months together in inescapabl­y close quarters. If love no longer binds them, misery does. When they’re not engaging in verbal sparring matches – sometimes with each other, sometimes with Paxton’s half-brother and his wife (Dulé Hill and Jazmyn Simon) – they’re relinquish­ing years of hardwon sobriety: Linda takes up smoking cigarettes again, while the more adventurou­s Paxton, a former heroin addict, avails himself of the opiates he’s discovered growing in their yard.

You can’t begrudge them, really; you might even light one up in solidarity. The stresses of working from home weigh heavily on Linda, a brittle corporate executive who continues to rise in the ranks even as her company keeps downsizing. (Remi Adefarasin’s brisk handheld camerawork is supplement­ed by extended satirical Zoom conversati­ons, amusingly tricked out with random freeze-frames,

audio blips and other technical snafus.) It’s a soulsuckin­g job but at least Linda is working, unlike Paxton, a delivery driver who’s been furloughed and has lost any sense of will or purpose. He’s being forced to sell his beloved motorcycle, a belabored image of his lost freedom, though he still has poetry in his soul; at night he ventures out into the street to deliver loud, anguished and frankly insufferab­le recitation­s to their neighbors.

The two make a tidy study in contrasts, and also a convenient pair of symbols: By making Linda a high-positioned cog in the capitalist machinery that ruthlessly exploits underemplo­yed but essential workers like Paxton,

Knight tries to wrap a lesson about socioecono­mic inequality and class privilege in a Hollywood comedy of remarriage. Liman made his own noisy contributi­on to that genre years ago with the Brad PittAngeli­na Jolie blockbuste­r “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” and he revisits the formula in agreeably scaled-down fashion here, suggesting that Linda and Paxton’s tedious imprisonme­nt may hold the key to their spiritual and romantic survival.

The director also pays low-key homage to some of the better action pictures he’s made, chiefly “The Bourne Identity” and “Edge of Tomorrow” – a very different movie from “Locked Down,” though one in which time also becomes something of a flat circle.

How Linda and Paxton go from butting heads in close quarters to planning a daring high-stakes robbery at Harrods is best left undisclose­d. Suffice to say that Knight, an erratic storytelle­r but often a dab hand at plotting, devises a scheme that makes counterint­uitively fun use of COVID conditions: plummeting economies, corporate damage-control strategies and an eerily underpopul­ated London where social distancing inevitably means lax security measures. (One distractin­g note: the presence of multiple unmasked characters in close proximity, which may of course be a depressing­ly accurate representa­tion of reality.)

Knight has collaborat­ed with the two leads before, with Ejiofor in the very good “Dirty Pretty Things” and with Hathaway in the misbegotte­n “Serenity.” For all their screwball

speechifyi­ng, the actors are in decent form here; their characters get on each other’s nerves and ours too, which under the circumstan­ces is only fitting. And their task – to hold our attention for the better part of two hours in a confined location – is trickier than it appears. Hathaway and Ejiofor must convince us not only that these two oil-and-water personalit­ies ultimately belong together but also that the lightfinge­red genre exercise they’re participat­ing in has a place under these uniquely desperate circumstan­ces.

They don’t entirely succeed, which says something about the movie but also about the uncertain, nerve-fraying moment of its reception. Is it possible to root for two characters who plan to commit robbery – even as a form of nose-thumbing rebellion against the capitalist status quo – during a health crisis that has destroyed the lives and taken the jobs of countless souls less privileged than they are? Can a movie about the everyday realities of our crushing new normal also be a breezy piece of Hollywood escapism? At its infrequent best, “Locked Down” suggests that it can. Or rather, that someday it might.

 ?? SUSIE ALLNUTT HBO Max/AP ?? Anne Hathaway and Chiwetel Ejiofor star as a couple stuck at home during the pandemic in the heist comedy ‘Locked Down.’
SUSIE ALLNUTT HBO Max/AP Anne Hathaway and Chiwetel Ejiofor star as a couple stuck at home during the pandemic in the heist comedy ‘Locked Down.’

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