The Guardian (USA)

Castle Falls review – Dolph Lundgren puts on his specs and flexes his pecs

- Phil Hoad

‘How do you feel about killing somebody? Because us getting out of here is pretty goddamn dependent on it.” Dolph Lundgren and Scott Adkins make a fine odd couple in this meatily satisfying action film – once it gets moving. The ageing hulk is on prime form, juggling directoria­l duties with a Balboan blue-collar turn in front of the camera, while Adkins, the current king of kickass B-movies, again shows his range and brings the Brit-comedy – a levity that borders on dorky, if that’s an appropriat­e word to describe a martialart­s matinee idol capable of caressing your jaw with a spin-kick.

Adkins plays Mike Wade, an overthe-hill MMA fighter from Birmingham, England, down on his luck in Birmingham, Alabama. Cadging a job as part of a demolition crew stripping Castle Heights hospital, he finds a three-holdall stash of greenbacks in a cupboard. With the building due to be dynamited in 90 minutes, he returns solo for the money – unaware that two other interested parties are also moving in: Lundgren’s prison guard Ericson, who needs to finance his daughter’s cancer treatment, and a gang kingpin (Scott Hunter) out to secure the loot on behalf of his incarcerat­ed brother.

That’s all that needs to be said. Andrew Knauer’s script spends the first third of the film unnecessar­ily detailing the various allegiance­s, which defers the good stuff: Lundgren and Adkins pounding seven shades out of each other and then teaming up against the real heavies. Lundgren, in his fleece and spectacles, looks like the most virile crown-green bowling player you’ve ever seen.

With a surprising­ly substantia­l action-directing resumé behind him, Lundgren makes strong positional use of the decrepit high-rise in a way that Die Hard did expertly, though his action choreograp­hy – serviceabl­e but staid – is less cutting-edge than Gareth Evans’s in The Raid. With so many factions in play, Adkins arguably doesn’t carry Castle Falls as much as he should – and deserves a better character flaw than “must overcome continuall­y being put in a sleeper hold”. Crammed into the film’s back half, his and Lundgren’s break for the ground floor feels like it’s only just getting going, but this is a partnershi­p that deserves to have legs.

• Castle Falls is available online on 20 December.

 ?? Photograph: Publicity image ?? Master and apprentice … Dolph Lundgren and Scott Adkins in Castle Falls.
Photograph: Publicity image Master and apprentice … Dolph Lundgren and Scott Adkins in Castle Falls.

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