The Oklahoman

‘HUNTER KILLER’

- — Brandy McDonnell,

R 2:01

It may not be as useless as a screen door on a submarine, but “Hunter Killer” doesn’t come close to threatenin­g “The Hunt for Red October’s” status as the stuffed-bear prize-holder for top sub thriller, either.

South African director Donovan Marsh isn’t the steadiest at the helm with this latest entry into the submerged subgenre of military dramas, but he and his stalwart cast manage to make an engaging if ultimately forgettabl­e undersea adventure.

Based on the 2012 novel “Firing Point” by Don Keith and George Wallace, “Hunter Killer” stars Gerard Butler (“300”) as smart, blue-collar submarine commander Joe Glass, who accepts the captaincy of the USS Arkansas from Rear Adm. John Fisk (a woefully miscast Common), who is looking to dispatch a trustworth­y soul to investigat­e the disappeara­nce of another U.S. sub near Russian waters. Capt. Glass, his by-the-book XO (Carter MacIntyre) and the rest of the wide-eyed yet capable crew sail into a possible war-starting scenario when they discover two Russian subs on their search — one, a sabotaged sunken vessel and the other well-hidden and ready to blow the Arkansas out of the water

After saving resolute Russian Capt. Andropov (the late Michael Nyqvist) from the damaged sub, Glass and his crew are recruited for another Russian rescue mission: secretly saving the diplomatic President Zakarin (Alexander Diachenko) from a coup led by his Boris Badenov-type Defense Minister (Michael Gor), who is eager to go to war with the Americans.

A highly trained quartet of elite soldiers, led by Bill Beaman (Toby Stephens), is tasked with doing the actual liberating of the President

Zakarin from the Russian naval base where he’s being held hostage. Along with Fisk, the people giving the orders in this unlikely yet engaging scenario are saberrattl­ing Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Charles Donnegan (Gary Oldman) and canny National Security Agency senior analyst Jayne Norquist (Linda Cardellini).

Marsh and screenwrit­ers Arne Schmidt and Jamie Moss manage to effectivel­y tighten the screws — literally in at least one case — on the cinematic tension, and they achieve an intense authentici­ty inside the USS Arkansas, with its lived-in bunks and battle stations that get violently rattled as torpedoes and missiles go off too close for comfort. The scenes of the subs’ exteriors too often look like the models they

undoubtedl­y are.

Character developmen­t also isn’t a strong suit for the helmer and writers, but Butler and Nyqvist share an appealing chemistry as two seasoned leaders willing to break the rules to do the right thing. And Beaman’s tactical teammates (Michael Trucco, Ryan McPartlin and Zane Holtz) boast a selfless cowboy charm that makes you want to root for them.

Although like Beaman brags, “Hunter Killer” doesn’t seem to know much about geopolitic­s, it’s also nice in the age of Russian Twitter bots and election meddling to see a depiction of U.S.Russian relationsh­ips that isn’t sinking fast.

Starring: Gerard Butler, Gary Oldman, Common, Linda Cardellini (violence and some language)

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