Calhoun Times

‘The Rhythm Section’ offers a fresh take on an old formula

- By Mark Kennedy

Associated Press

When you think of topnotch movie assassins, there’s a good chance you conjure up Samuel L. Jackson or Keanu Reeves or Matt Damon. You might not immediatel­y think of Blake Lively. But now you should.

Lively makes a startling effective killer in “The Rhythm Section,” a moody internatio­nal thriller that turns a broken woman into a sleek, potentiall­y franchise-leading contract assassin.

“I never thought you’d get this far,” one admirer says of Lively toward the end and the audience is likely to agree. It’s an absolute joy to see the star of such projects as “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” and “Gossip Girl” become a very believable guntoting, throat-cutting killing machine.

When we first meet her, she’s at rock bottom in London. Her Stephanie Patrick is a drug-using prostitute whose downward spiral has been triggered by tragedy. Her family was wiped out in a plane crash and the survivor’s guilt is overwhelmi­ng.

Patrick is numbing herself from gauzy flashback memories of the family happy together when an investigat­ive journalist shows up with explosive news: The plane crash was no accident. It was brought down by a bomb and all aboard were merely collateral damage as part of a larger conspiracy. “You’re another victim. You’re just not dead yet,” she is told.

What would you do? Patrick decides on an ultra form of revenge — killing everyone associated with the bombing. That takes her to Tangier, Spain, the Scottish Highlands, New York City and Marseilles as the web of deceit grows ever thicker, involving rogue CIA and MI6 officers and Middle Eastern dictators.

Patrick is a regular woman thrust into this Jason Bourneish position and she’s battered around and frequently mistreated. Her bruises show. The fight scenes are painful. The glamorous Lively is transforme­d — shaggy haircut, bloody wounds, suffering and in fear. Her English accent is also very, very good.

The other person who wows in “The Rhythm Section” is behind the camera: Director Reed Morano (“The Skeleton Twins,” “The Handmaid’s Tale”) puts us very close to Patrick and we see and hear what she does. Morano captures the disorienta­ting, adrenaline-rush of violence in a visceral way.

When a bomb goes off near Patrick, our hearing is lost, too. When bullets splinter a window’s wood casing nearby, we feel the thud. When our heroine runs down a street, the camera jostles up and down. A car chase with Patrick driving in Morocco is disorienta­ting, claustroph­obic and frightenin­g because we are in the passenger seat beside her.

The film is produced by two veterans of the James Bond series — Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli — but this film is far from the slick, manufactur­ed cool of 007. This is a spy thriller brought back down to human dimensions. Our heroine is often lucky and more often gets beaten badly. She is shaken and stirred.

Novelist Mark Burnell has turned his book of the same name into a screenplay and has fun tweaking the genre’s formulas. Patrick finds a key ally in Scotland — a gruff trainer (an aloof Jude Law). He’s a military profession­al and she begs him to teach her, like similar team-ups in “La Femme Nikita” and “The Profession­al.” But this time he examines her and declares: “You’re a cliche.” He should know. Cue the montage of running up mountains and shooting at targets.

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