The Asian Age

It’s fast- paced, slick, violent & well- acted

- RICHARD ROEPER By arrangemen­t with Asia Features

At least half the time, Robert McCall is more of a Wish Granter/ Life Saver than an Equalizer. A kindly bookstore operator’s ex- husband and his evil henchmen have kidnapped her daughter and are taking her to Turkey. She’ll never see her little girl again! We’ll see about that, says the Life Saver. A Holocaust survivor who was separated from his sister when they were children is convinced she’s alive, but nobody believes the sometimes- confused old man. Give me a little time to look into this, says the Wish Granter.

Thing of it is, McCall’s beneficiar­ies often don’t even know the identity of their guardian angel. They just think of him as the unassuming neighbourh­ood bookworm and Lyft driver who always has a kind word and carries himself with quiet confidence. He hardly looks the part of a superhero.

Ah, but we know the truth about the widower McCall. We know he’s a highly decorated former military man and ex- CIA Black Ops specialist. We know he was quietly spending his retirement in Boston, avoiding trouble — until he couldn’t look the other way anymore. Now he’s back in the game, but on his own terms, as a freelancer who works alone.

In The Equalizer 2, the great Denzel Washington hits a variety of notes reprising his role as McCall, in a brilliant performanc­e that often rises above the pulpy, blood- soaked material. When McCall is coping with his OCD and interactin­g with his neighbours and his Lyft customers, he’s funny and warm and a little bit sad at times.

When McCall is spitting fire while telling a gifted high school kid to make a choice between becoming a gun- totting gangbanger or doing something meaningful with his life, it’s as if we’re suddenly watching a powerful stage performanc­e.

And when McCall ( and presumably a stunt double or two) is dispatchin­g garden- variety bro- jerks or heavily armed mercenarie­s, it’s all about cheering for the quality kills and cringing at some of the bone- cracking violence and even laughing at how coolly McCall bests his opponents — not only physically, but when it comes to action- movie one- liners as well.

Antoine Fuqua, who directed Washington’s Oscar- winning turn in Training Day ( 2001) and helmed the first Equalizer ( 2014), returns for the sequel. It’s slick, violent, fast- paced, well- acted but by- the- numbers summer fare.

This is the kind of movie where it’s Ok to nudge the person next to you ( if you know the person next to you) and whisper, “He’s not going to get out of this movie alive”, or, “It’s so obvious that guy is a double- crosser!” It feels as if the screenplay is designed to give you the satisfacti­on of always being right — not to mention how it stacks the deck by making each of McCall’s opponents so cartoonish­ly despicable, they deserve the street justice doled out by our guy.

EQ2 is pure B- movie in terms of plot, but we get A- list performanc­es from wonderful actors such as Melissa Leo, who returns as McCall’s former boss, Susan Plummer; Bill Pullman as Susan’s husband, a historian and author; Pedro Pascal as McCall’s former partner in the CIA, who has long thought McCall was dead; and Ashton Sanders as Miles, a teenage neighbour of McCall’s at a pivotal crossroad in his young life.

Fuqua the stylist has never been one to shy away from ominous metaphors and impressive­ly choreograp­hed, extended action sequences — and, oh boy, is that the case here. For days, there’s talk of a storm coming. Ooh, double meaning! We get an actual storm that is close to hurricane level and, of course, the bleep- storm of justice McCall will eventually rain down upon those who dare cross him.

There’s no real story to speak of in EQ2. Many of the action sequences are self- contained vignettes in which McCall either quietly helps out someone he knows, or takes matters into his own hands when he happens upon a grave injustice.

The main plot line is put into motion when some hired killers take out a guy who seems to be some sort of diplomat or businessma­n and his wife in Belgium, and McCall eventually becomes involved. There’s not much effort to tie it all together with any kind of plausible, big- picture cohesion, but no matter.

All we need to know is some very bad people have crossed Robert McCall, and that’s almost always a deadly mistake.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India