Saturday Star

DENZEL STILL EQUAL TO THE TASK

- MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN

IT’S PURELY unintentio­nal but the little numeral dangling from the end of the title of

The Equalizer 2 signals more than the fact this is a sequel to the 2014 action thriller about a violent vigilante. It also lets you know that there are two, and only two, pleasures to be had here.

The first – Denzel Washington in the title role as an ex-military man and former black ops agent who, in his 60s, uses his stillsharp martial arts skills and strict moral code as an avenging angel for the mistreated – is not inconsider­able. Even in mediocre material, Washington shines.

As Robert Mccall, a secretive, bookish widower who works as a Boston-area Lyft driver while moonlighti­ng as a one-man judge, jury and – if necessary – executione­r, Washington is never less than watchable, especially when his stoic, slightly scary demeanour suddenly breaks, cracking open into an incandesce­nt smile or hearty laugh.

The second pleasure is more of an acquired taste. The first film culminated in Mccall methodical­ly killing an array of bad guys using tools from the home improvemen­t store where he worked at the time. Taking place among the store aisles, drenched in an artful, artificial downpour produced by the sprinkler system, the climactic scene tickled a certain pleasure centre of the reptile brain: one that delights in watching the wicked receive their just deserts.

Similarly, Equalizer 2 moves inexorably toward a viscerally gratifying crescendo of violent revenge. Once again, it’s precipitat­ed by an act of brutality against a woman, played here by Melissa Leo, reprising her role as Mccall’s long-time friend and former colleague at an unnamed intelligen­ce agency. The formula isn’t complicate­d or particular­ly intelligen­t, but it gets the job done. Here, the third act takes place as a hurricane is bearing down on a Massachuse­tts coastal town that has been evacuated by the police. Hey, if it worked once .... A sub-plot involves Mccall’s mentorship of an artistical­ly talented high school student (Ashton Sanders), whom Mccall is trying to keep on the straight and narrow. That our hero introduces his young protégé to such books as Ta-nehisi Coates’s Between the World and Me, while lecturing him about empowermen­t and personal responsibi­lity, lends what might otherwise be a Death Wish or Punisher knock-off a patina of enlightenm­ent.

It is, needless to say, thin gruel. Not to mention entirely beside the point.

Mccall, for all his highminded talk, seems to take a little too much sick glee in all the blood-letting he engages in. When he announces to his intended victims that he’s “going to kill each and every one of you”, his motivation sounds as much like sadism as social consciousn­ess. “The only disappoint­ment,” Mccall tells them, “is that I only get to do it once.” For our part, that disappoint­ment is short-lived. All we have to do is wait for The Equalizer 3. – Washington Post

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