The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Film brings fresh cadence to action/thriller genre

‘The Rhythm Section’ has a spirit, but often loses the beat.

- By Katie Walsh

Award-winning director and cinematogr­apher Reed Morano has tackled dystopian futures in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” the end of the world in “I Think We’re Alone Now” and devastatin­g grief in “Meadowland.” Her third feature film, “The Rhythm Section,” combines a bit of all these themes, though it has a bit more kick to it than her prior indies. Starring Blake Lively as Stephanie Patrick, “The Rhythm Section” is adapted from the series of thriller novels by Mark Burnell, with a screenplay by Burnell himself.

Lively has severely deglammed herself in this edgy role, and when we first meet Stephanie, she’s a heroin-smoking London sex worker with a shaggy bowl cut. When a reporter (Raza Jaffrey) contracts her services to talk about the plane crash that killed her family, Stephanie’s rock bottom existence is thrown into chaos. With the knowledge that a bomb on board caused the crash, she sets out to attain revenge. She just has to kick the smack first.

There’s something rather enjoyable about watching such a wastoid try and turn herself into “La Femme Nikita,” with the help (or harm) of a former MI-6 agent, B ( Jude Law), who has valuable intel about the terrorist organizati­on Stephanie’s seeking. He whips her into shape, and the first half of “The Rhythm Section” is essentiall­y an exercise in body horror as Lively subjects her battered body to opiate detox, freezing lake water, clumsy fisticuffs and lots and lots of jogging.

When B sends Stephanie into the field on a few wild goose chases, posing as a dead assassin named Petra, wow, is she ever bad, and it’s honestly refreshing. Enough with the “Black Widow” super spies. For something really original, let’s see a green wannabe hit woman try to navigate a small car through Tangier while in a full panic. The willingnes­s to let Stephanie be human and react as such brings a sense of reality and authentici­ty back to the action-spy genre, which has in many ways gotten too slick.

While Morano brings a gritty neorealist style with the help of cinematogr­apher Sean Bobbitt, and Lively dirties herself up for cred, writer Burnell brings his story to the screen, though the adaptation is a bit rickety. We all know why Stephanie does what she does, but why does anyone else? Why does B recruit her and what is his goal? Why does Keith, the reporter, need her? Why does she enter into a dalliance with intended mark/ reluctant ally Marc Serra (Sterling K. Brown)? The storytelli­ng here is a bit too economical, and the vague aphorisms Lively mutters in a serviceabl­e British accent don’t clarify anything. “The Rhythm Section” launches Morano into a new world of action/thriller filmmaking, and her unique style is a welcome refresh for the genre. But while it certainly has a spirit, it often loses the beat.

 ?? PARAMOUNT PICTURES/TNS ?? Blake Lively stars in “The Rhythm Section.”
PARAMOUNT PICTURES/TNS Blake Lively stars in “The Rhythm Section.”

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