Los Angeles Times

Dad’s new job leaves family ‘ No Escape’

Owen Wilson handles his action role with aplomb as a patriarch facing rioting locals.

- calendar@latimes.com By Gary Goldstein

It’s hardly essential viewing, but “No Escape” is a tense, at times riveting actionthri­ller about innocents abroad. Supersize your popcorn, check your logic at the door and settle in for a pretty good ride.

Engineer Jack Dwyer ( Owen Wilson) has picked the world’s worst day to relocate his family— wife Annie ( Lake Bell), young daughters Lucy ( Sterling Jerins) and Beeze ( Claire Geare), all moving from Texas to Southeast Asia, where Jack’s starting a job at an internatio­nal conglomera­te. Shortly after landing in this unidentifi­ed land ( the film was shot in Thailand), the Dwyers become trapped in the midst of a political coup in which armed rebels are murdering everyone in sight.

That these merciless insurgents are protesting a dubious shift in the country’s water delivery system is of particular trouble to Jack: His new employer is the company behind said shift. Add that Jack’s photo is plastered on highly visible corporate welcome banners, and the Dwyers might as well have targets painted on their American backs.

The mayhem comes fast and furious once Jack realizes the situation and rebels storm the Dwyers’ high- rise hotel. What follows is essentiall­y one twisty, often frightenin­g chase as the Dwyers band together to escape across the border amid mounting tragedy.

Helping the family is a jaunty if mysterious British rogue, Hammond ( Pierce Brosnan), who makes their acquaintan­ce on the plane ride in, does some quick buddy- bonding with Jack, then disappears for stretches until toward the end.

Co- writer Drew Dowdle and co- writer and director John Erick Dowdle, the brothers behind “Quarantine” and “As Above, So Below,” attempt to infuse their loaded story with enough personal perspectiv­e and intimate emotion to offset — or maybe justify — all the roiling action. But they only partly succeed.

What Jack and Annie endure to protect themselves and their children goes a longway in keeping themovie watchable. But save their late- breaking and wellplayed life discussion and declaratio­n of love, we never learn enough about the couple to feel more than viscerally invested in their plight.

The movie’s most stressful scene, which involves the family’s death- defying leap across a pair of rooftops, triggered unintended laughter froma preview audience, but that may not be the universal reaction. Ham- fisted as the set piece might be, it’s heart- in- mouth time. It’s fair to say that what Lucy and Beeze are forced to witness here, if experience­d by real- life children, would likely take years of psychother­apy to unwind.

Wilson proves surprising­ly effective as an everyday man of action yet retains enough of his trademark wry charm to feel real. Bell is also quite good as a supportive wife forced to fight and face a few harsh truths about human behavior. Brosnan, charisma intact, makes the most of his limited screen time. But his part, a kind of distant cousin to his role in the 2005 dark comedy “The Matador,” feels too minor and wedged in here to truly matter.

The movie’s epilogue could use an epilogue; there’s a strange lack of finality here. In addition, some of the film’s sociopolit­ical messaging involving evil corporate greed, violent extremism and white privilege becomes muddled. Butasan escape from the late- summer heat, you could do far worse than this hard- working nail- biter.

 ?? Roland Neveu Weinstein Co. ?? PIERCE BROSNAN, left, plays a Brit who aids Jack ( OwenWilson) and his clan.
Roland Neveu Weinstein Co. PIERCE BROSNAN, left, plays a Brit who aids Jack ( OwenWilson) and his clan.

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