The Palm Beach Post

‘Assassin’s Creed’ is an exciting, if strange, ride

- By Katie Walsh Tribune News Service “ASSASSIN’S CREED” Grade: Starring: Rated:

In 2015, director Justin Kurzel and actors Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard teamed up for a prestigiou­s cinematic adaptation, a bloody, mad take on “Macbeth.” In 2016, the trio moved from Shake - speare to… a video game? T a k i n g o n t h e p o p u l a r “Assassin’s Creed” game seems like quite the left turn, and while the results aren’t as striking as the previous outing — it’s prett y uneven — the film is thoroughly stamped with Kurzel’s unique visual st yle, which makes for an exciting, if strange ride.

There is a complicate­d and deep mythology behind the game, and the film follows it mostly faithfully. Callum Lynch (Fassbender) is a death row inmate with a violent childhood.

He i s p u t t o d e a t h by lethal injection, but wakes up in a clinic at the shadowy Abstergo corporatio­n. The lead scientist there, Dr. Sofia Rikkin (Cotillard) claims she’s researchin­g “the cure to violence.”

For his part in that, Cal is harnessed up to a giant mec h a n i c a l a r m c a l l e d the animus and forced to r e g r e s s t o 1 5 t h c e n t u r y Spain, where he fights the Spanish Inquisitio­n as his hooded assassin ancestor, Aguilar. Like a video game! And Abstergo? They’re just a front for the Knights Templar, the eternal mortal enemies of the assassins. C+

Michael Fassbender, Marion Cotillard, Michael K. Williams, Jeremy Irons, Brendan Gleeson, Ariane Laped. Directed by: Justin Kurzel

PG-13. 1 hour, 48 minutes

Both groups want to get their hands on “the Apple of Eden,” which has the genetic code for free will (man’s first disobedien­ce). The Knights Templar want to bow people into peace through mental obedience, while the assassins are all about free will, violence and all.

If this story sounds hokey, it is, and somehow writers Michael Lesslie, Adam Cooper and Bill Collage have managed to write a script that is at once far too complicate­d and extremely shallow. There are a few lines that elicit giggles, and some plot points that feel ripped from “National Treasure.”

But despite the tortured writing, Kurzel shoots the heck out of the film, especially the flashbacks, when Aguilar and hi s assassin companion Maria (Ariane L abed) parkour around ancient Andalusia, kicking some serious Templar butt.

We know from “Macbeth” just how well Kurzel and c inemato grapher Adam Arkapaw shoot grimy, dusty, bloody Medieval times, and these scenes, with vertiginou­s aerial shots, prove to be a new accomplish­ment in that vein.

You spend the film waiting for Cal to get back in the animus so we can soar around Seville again.

T h e s c e n e s s e t a t t h e Abstergo facility aren’t as visually exciting, but the sound design and score are tremendous, combining ancient Arabic music with droning drums and whispers to create a hallucinat­ory aural experience.

Though sometimes confoundin­g, there are some interestin­g themes lying just below the surface of “Assassin’s Creed,” particular­ly with regard to Cal as a prisoner who goes from one supermax to another. The scientists claim that modernit y has no outlet for aggression, resulting in an elaborate system that pathologiz­es violence and contains it within a surveillan­ce driven prison panopticon. The Apple would let them pre-empt all of that by containing humanity in a mental prison.

“Assassin’s Creed” will be polarizing, but as an entry in Kurzel’s oeuvre, it’s fascinatin­g for the ways that it doesn’t fit and the ways that it does. It is so singularly his film — both in the style and the fascinatio­n with hubris, power and violence. It’s his mark on the studio blockbuste­r that make the brilliant parts of “Assassin’s Creed” worthwhile.

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