The Guardian (USA)

Cocaine Bear review – critter-on-drugs thriller struggles to live up to sensationa­l title

- Ellen E Jones

Once upon a time, deep in the woods by Georgia’s Chattahooc­hee River, a bear stumbled upon a cartel’s stash, ingested $2m worth of cocaine and … died. If the near-inescapabl­e marketing for this movie had you idly wondering, “What would happen if a bear did a load of cocaine?” this is the underwhelm­ing but factual answer, supplied by a 1985 news report.

That’s not much of a movie, however, so screenwrit­er Jimmy Warden has instead imagined whatmighth­ave happened if that 175lb black bear had gone on a coke-fuelled murderous rampage. The result is this film, and not since 2006’s Snakes on a Plane has a title promised so much entertainm­ent, so succinctly. But is this film, like that Samuel L Jackson vehicle, also fated to be blown off-course by the hot air of its own hype? And, relatedly, do bears defecate in the woods?

Cocaine Bear starts promisingl­y with a moment of superlativ­e, hairrock-soundtrack­ed slapstick from Matthew Rhys, and has intermitte­nt hedonistic highs throughout. Banks’ direction goes for the gore with admirable gusto, peaking – too soon, alas – with a truly wild ambulance-pursuedby-bear chase. This cast is fine too, featuring the late Ray Liotta looking like

Henry Hill back from witness protection, and The Florida Project’s Brooklynn Prince making good on her early promise. But these are respected character actors. There’s no one here who would be shameless enough to straightfa­ce a line like, “I’ve had it with these muthafucki­n snakes on this muthafucki­n plane!”, even if Warden’s script had thoughtful­ly provided one.

There is also no bear behavioura­l expert, spurious or otherwise, to talk us through what happens to the ursine brain on cocaine, ideally with wall charts and diagrams. The CGI bear looks OK – it suffices for a few jump scares – but true suspense would necessitat­e a narrative buildup, such as a coked-up equivalent of Jurassic Park’s Jeff Goldblum might provide. There’s a class A premise for a B-movie in here, but Cocaine Bear is just too sober to get high on its own supply.

• Cocaine Bear is released on 24 February in the US and UK.

 ?? ?? Goes for the gore … Sari (Keri Russell) in Cocaine Bear, directed by Elizabeth Banks. Photograph: Photo Credit: Pat Redmond/Universal Pictures
Goes for the gore … Sari (Keri Russell) in Cocaine Bear, directed by Elizabeth Banks. Photograph: Photo Credit: Pat Redmond/Universal Pictures

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