The Columbus Dispatch

New Netflix thriller falls well short of superhuman

- Justin Chang

Hey, have you heard of this new stuff? It’s the hottest thing to hit the market in ages, or at least since last week. It could be a total thrill; it also could be terrible, maybe even unbearable. You have no way of knowing how you will react, really. You just have to take a risk and give it a try.

This more or less sums up the premise of “Project Power,” a new and vaguely superhero-ish action-thriller set in New Orleans, where drug dealers are pushing an unusually volatile new product called Power.

Curiously, though, it also describes the experience of learning that Netflix, supplier of choice for so many couch-bound streamahol­ics, has coughed up yet another piece of so-called original content. Is it good or bad, or at least worth sampling? Will you become hopelessly addicted, or recoil and explode into a million fiery shards?

The answer, at least with regard to “Project Power,” is likely to fall somewhere in between.

Slickly directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman from a script by Mattson Tomlin, the movie is too fast and flashy to qualify as boring but also too generic to draw blood, the assorted guts and viscera that occasional­ly splatter the frame notwithsta­nding.

It recycles a few shopworn ideas about superpower­s and human mortality from comic-book properties such as “X-men,” then puts fine actors Jamie Foxx and Joseph Gordon-levitt through the busy paces of a plot that runs nearly two hours without arriving anywhere particular­ly notable or novel.

Gordon-levitt is Frank, a wily cop trying to get to the bottom of the Power supply chain. Foxx plays Art, a man with fast fists, a grim air of mystery and a traumatic personal narrative that leaks out in sad little dribbles of flashback.

These two characters are connected — to their benefit as well as the movie’s — by a plucky teenager named Robin (Dominique Fishback), a gifted aspiring rapper moonlighti­ng as a dealer. She thus feeds their dangerous fascinatio­n with Power and will prove crucial to unraveling the tricky medical conspiracy behind its heavy circulatio­n on the streets of New Orleans.

Power is not your typical drug. It comes in capsule form and fittingly resembles a miniature light bulb, complete with glowing filament. When you ingest it, it temporaril­y restructur­es your DNA and grants you five precious minutes of superhuman ability. Those abilities are rooted in animal characteri­stics, and the possibilit­ies are as varied and unpredicta­ble as the Chinese zodiac: Will you regenerate severed limbs like a lizard, or camouflage yourself like an octopus? Or will you have the bad luck to overdose and combust on the spot? (The visual-effects artists clearly had fun answering some of those questions in as grotesque and eye-popping a fashion as possible.)

The movie’s most memorable effects, though, are not technologi­cal in nature. They are the wary side-eye glances and unexpected smiles that cross Fishback’s face as she banters with Foxx and Gordon-levitt, and also the streams of hip-hop poetry — carefully scripted but thrillingl­y delivered — that come pouring out during a few welcome stretches of down time.

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