USA TODAY US Edition

Lively’s ‘Rhythm Section’ is in need of fresh beats

- Brian Truitt Columnist USA TODAY

“The Rhythm Section” is a really strange title for a globetrott­ing spy thriller – it honestly sounds more like a sequel to “Whiplash” than a middling, convoluted secret agent pot-boiler – though most everything else about the fitfully intriguing Blake Lively action movie leans toward convention­ality.

With screenwrit­er Mark Burnell adapting his own novel, “Rhythm Section” (★★☆☆; rated R; in theaters nationwide Friday) mines the familiar world of female assassins out for revenge that we’ve seen in “La Femme Nikita” and “Peppermint.” Lively pulls off one of her best movie roles so far – ranking with her surprising­ly delicious shark flick “The Shallows” – and is surrounded by plenty of visual spectacle, yet is waylaid by a narrative that lacks

excitement. Even the twists seem painfully ordinary.

The movie does change up the spy genre by exploring a somewhat minimalist side, at least at the start. There’s almost no dialogue as we’re introduced to Stephanie Patrick, a former top Oxford student and now heroin-addicted British prostitute who lost her family in a plane crash that she was supposed to be on. Director Reed Morano (an Emmy winner for “The Handmaid’s Tale”) silently shifts from Stephanie’s happy memories with her mom, dad and brother to her complete emotional shutdown after the tragedy.

Three years later and still obsessed with the incident, Stephanie finds out from a journalist (Raza Jaffrey) that it was in fact an act of terrorism. Wanting to kill everybody involved, she meets former intelligen­ce operative Iain Boyd (Jude Law), who gives her a crash course in no-nonsense espionage training.

Stephanie goes undercover, traveling from Madrid to Tangier to Marseille, and assumes the identity of an enigmatic global assassin named Petra (who’s actually dead but no one ever found a body!) plus gets involved with Marc Serra (Sterling K. Brown), an ex-CIA informatio­n broker.

Lively is game for the role, showcasing a wide range of emotions and action-film moves, and some of the best stuff in “Rhythm Section” is the pushand-pull dynamic between Stephanie and Iain, her spycraft Mr. Miyagi. She asks how soon she’ll be an ace fighter, and he quips, “Your menopause will be a distant memory,” though the learning curve does end up being rather impressive. (Unlike Law, Brown – whose mere presence often makes everything around him better – is unfortunat­ely wasted here.)

As opposed to her usual red-carpet glamorous side, Lively receives a full makeunder.

From makeup to wardrobe, Stephanie looks and feels like she’s beenthroug­h the wringer, plus uses an endless array of hairstyles and colors.

Akin to “Atomic Blonde” minus the style, the movie shies away from doing anything too nuanced or fancy, though Morano puts together a neat one-take car chase that stands out among the various set pieces. Aside from a few cool moments, “The Rhythm Section” is perfectly content marching to the beat of the same old drum.

 ?? JOSE HARO ?? Blake Lively plays Stephanie.
JOSE HARO Blake Lively plays Stephanie.
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