The Guardian (USA)

Rogue Hostage review – action thriller as cheesy as a supermarke­t dairy aisle

- Leslie Felperin

When you think about, it’s obvious why there are so many enclosed-space hostage thrillers: they’re pretty cheap to make. Location shooting is expensive, but all you need here is your he-man, an assortment of hostages – preferably including one or two who are dear to the hero, like a wife or child – and that enclosed space. An airplane or speeding bus are great if you have a bit more cash to burn, but in this more economical­ly budgeted directed film by Jon Keeyes, we have a humble supermarke­t. It’s one of those really big US supermarke­ts, like a Wal-Mart, but it’s called Nelson’s, after its owner in the story, who is played by John Malkovich, seriously slumming it. Fortunatel­y, it’s a supermarke­t with camping, DIY and even ammunition aisles, to help further the story along.

Malkovich’s Sam Nelson is merely a supporting character – one of the hostages, as well as the wealthy congressma­n stepfather to the real hero, ex-Marine turned child protection ser

vices social worker Kyle Snowden (Tyrese Gibson). Kyle is suffering with PTSD from his time in Afghanista­n, but is neverthele­ss devoted to his cute daughter Angel (Zani Jones Mbayise), his friend and co-worker Clove (Brandi Bravo), and all the kids he saves from unsafe places, such as Hispanic migrant’s child Manny (Carlos S Sanchez). All of the above end up trapped in Nelson’s by some disenfranc­hised white rightwinge­rs in suicide vests, led by Eagan (Christophe­r Backus), who are threatenin­g to blow the whole place up for assorted hazy reasons, mostly revenge.

Keeyes and scriptwrit­er Mickey Solis skew the material towards lefty viewers by making the underlying culture-war friction pretty obvious and having all the good guys be either people of colour or gay – or both, as in the case of store manager Sunshine (Luna Lauren Vélez, a treat), who finds a secure room to hide in and helps Kyle strategise by means of a short-range radio network and a psychology degree. The whole shooting match is pretty bloody, and as cheesy as the dairy aisle, but decent fun to watch.

• Rogue Hostage is released on 26 July on digital platforms.

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