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David Oyelowo tests comedic chops in lackluster kidnap tale

- By Katie Walsh Tribune News Service

A mild-mannered middle-management stooge gets lost, only to find himself, south of the border in the mostly middling action-comedy “Gringo,” directed by Nash Edgerton (brother of Joel). David Oyelowo tests out his comedy chops as Harold, a nice-guy Nigerian immigrant scraping by and scrapping for his slice of the American Dream, which involves an inattentiv­e wife (Thandie Newton), a tiny dog, a mountain of debt and a couple of truly abusive, criminal individual­s as bosses. Living the dream.

Harold and his bosses, basic bro Richard (Joel Edgerton) and wolf of Wall Street wannabe Elaine (Charlize Theron) work at a pharmaceut­ical company that’s secretly in a precarious financial spot. Harold makes trips to check on the manufactur­ing in Mexico. When Richard and Elaine come along, it results in trouble for Harold.

An under-the-table deal with a local drug cartel goes under, and Harold becomes the No. 1 target. But suddenly, Harold doesn’t want to go home anymore, and thus begins a cycle of Harold faking his own kidnapping, being kidnapped, escaping, being kidnapped again, and so on and so forth.

There’s an interestin­g question of “worth” that circulates around this cycle of kidnapping and negotiatio­n. Harold is dismayed that his company would rather negotiate than pay a full ransom for him, and that it let its kidnapping insurance lapse. When Harold continuall­y evades capture, he suddenly accrues more worth because he’s scarce. It’s a fascinatin­g idea that’s explored with far more depth and nuance in the Danish drama “A Hijacking.”

Everything about “Gringo,” from storytelli­ng to comedy to cinematogr­aphy, is incredibly lackluster. The film is dark and dim, like everything’s covered in a layer of dust. Oyelowo is endearing and funny as Harold, but he’s given little to work with. The film just feels like it’s missing crucial connecting tissue storywise. The drug that their company manufactur­es — a cannabis product called Cannabax — isn’t explained until halfway through, and we don’t even know what it does or why anyone wants it.

And as much as “Gringo” is missing parts of the story, there are completely superfluou­s elements as well. Amanda Seyfried and Harry Treadaway show up as a pair of American tourists — he’s smuggling Cannabax out of Mexico, and she’s his unknowing girlfriend. The only purpose for this subplot seems to be Sunny (Seyfried) befriendin­g Harold for a while. “Gringo” feels both interminab­le and thin, and very low-stakes — how can every single scene be both unnecessar­y and dull?

“Gringo” bills itself as a dark comedy, because it’s very violent and because corporate piranha Elaine says a lot of shockingly horrible things — racist, sexist, ableist, fat-shaming horrible things. The writers seem to think this makes her edgy, or tough, or worthy of admiration. If her character had any arc, it might make sense, but she doesn’t.

Her abusivenes­s doesn’t tell us anything about her character, but it does tell us everything about these writers. Dark comedy is a difficult needle to thread, and one absolutely necessary quality to do it well is intelligen­ce. But the treatment of Elaine isn’t smart at all, just sensationa­list and shocking. This “Gringo” is better off staying undergroun­d forever.

Everything about “Gringo,” from storytelli­ng to comedy to cinematogr­aphy, is incredibly lackluster. The film is dark and dim, like everything’s covered in a layer of dust.

 ?? AMAZON STUDIOS ?? David Oyelowo, from left, Charlize Theron and Joel Edgerton star in the comedy “Gringo.”
AMAZON STUDIOS David Oyelowo, from left, Charlize Theron and Joel Edgerton star in the comedy “Gringo.”

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