USA TODAY US Edition

‘Sicario 2’ is a grim but timely sequel

‘Soldado’ heaps on the at-all-costs darkness

- Brian Truitt

The Brolinaiss­ance continues with its most brutally timely chapter to date.

Josh Brolin’s strong movie summer (which has included starring roles in “Avengers: Infinity War” and “Deadpool 2”) finds him in full antihero mode in the grim action thriller “Sicario: Day of the Soldado” ( ★★g☆; rated R; in theaters nationwide Friday). Coming off 2015’s excellent “Sicario,” it’s the most unconventi­onal and perhaps unnecessar­y sequel in a season full of follow-ups, but Brolin and Benicio Del Toro’s morally dubious characters keep “Soldado” gripping while subject matter makes it relevant.

Gone are the original film’s main star (Emily Blunt, whose FBI agent Kate Macer apparently got this mission off ) and director (Denis Villeneuve). But continuing problems with drug cartels at the Mexican border mean more stories to tell.

Written by “Sicario” screenwrit­er Taylor Sheridan and directed by Stefano Sollima, “Soldado” catches up with CIA operative Matt Graver (Brolin) as he’s faced with the new and very dangerous possibilit­y of terrorists being smuggled into America. He reaches out to his man down south, attorney turned hit man Alejandro (Del Toro), to ignite a turf war between drug cartels by kidnapping a kingpin’s daughter, Isabel Reyes (Isabela Moner).

When the mission goes off-course, CIA deputy director Cynthia Foards (Catherine Keener) sees Isabel as collateral damage, and Graver gives Alejandro the order to take her out. But the seemingly black-hearted assassin does have a soft side — Isabel reminds him of his own daughter, who was killed in the drug war — and he goes rogue, forcing a conflicted Graver to get a crew together to hunt his buddy down.

Sheridan has a knack for timely warts-and-all tales of the modern American way (“Hell or High Water,” “Wind River”), and he offers a thought-provoking view of how foreign policy, border security and human traffickin­g affect a wide swath of people — pretty much pick a hot-button topic and it’s here. “Soldado” isn’t overtly political, yet there is a ruthless nihilism to the government’s actions, especially with Foards’ no-matter-the-cost mindset.

If you make Alejandro seem like a teddy bear, you’re plenty hardcore.

Del Toro deftly juggles that new sense of heart with the violence that follows in his path. Matching him in magnetic machismo is Brolin, whose Graver has just as much of a wide-swinging character arc as Alejandro from the first movie to the sequel.

Even with “Day of the Soldado’s” standout actors, there’s definite artistry that hasn’t carried over between films: A nice contrast exists between Graver and Alejandro’s bloody world and the quiet, almost haunting Mexican vistas Alejandro and Isabel visit on the lam, but it’s nowhere as gorgeous as the first “Sicario” (shot by Oscar-winning cinematogr­aphy legend Roger Deakins).

There’s also a relentless darkness in “Soldado” that some fans of the original will love, but the inherent idealism of Blunt’s Macer is missed: When everybody’s a shade of bad, it begs for any sort of normal protagonis­t. The edginess is apparent even in the kids, from the feral Isabel to another teenage character who seems to exist solely to set up a third film.

While “Sicario” didn’t exactly beg to be a film franchise, “Soldado” proves it’ll go as long as Brolin and Del Toro can stay corrupt and captivatin­g.

 ?? RICHARD FOREMAN JR./LIONSGATE ?? Isabel (Isabela Moner) and Alejandro (Benicio Del Toro) are on the run in “Sicario: Day of Soldado,” out today.
RICHARD FOREMAN JR./LIONSGATE Isabel (Isabela Moner) and Alejandro (Benicio Del Toro) are on the run in “Sicario: Day of Soldado,” out today.
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 ?? RICHARD FOREMAN JR./LIONSGATE ?? CIA operative Matt Graver (Josh Brolin, left) has a new assignment for Alejandro (Benicio Del Toro) in “Day of the Soldado.”
RICHARD FOREMAN JR./LIONSGATE CIA operative Matt Graver (Josh Brolin, left) has a new assignment for Alejandro (Benicio Del Toro) in “Day of the Soldado.”

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