The Guardian (USA)

Role Play review – action comedy wastes Kaley Cuoco and David Oyelowo

- Benjamin Lee

Rather like the studio horror movie, the bar for the action comedy has lowered so dramatical­ly that the mere act of not tripping over it headfirst is now considered enough. Modeled after an old-fashioned, something-for-him and something-for-her date-night formula, they tend to involve attractive stars smugly quipping at each other while sleekly avoiding pop-soundtrack­ed gunfire, all theoretica­lly allowing for the opportunit­y to show off dual personas, class clown and jock rolled into one.

But the magic that was on display in 2005’s magnetic Mr & Mrs Smith, a film that has arguably had the most visible, and damaging, impact on the genre in the almost two decades since (itself heavily in debt to 1994’s True Lies), has been almost entirely absent in its many imitators. Last year’s hauntingly awful Chris Evans-Ana de Armas starrer Ghosted acted as an almost instructiv­e what-not-to-do, a punishing, unintentio­nal parody of what these films have become in a year in which there seemed to be more of them than ever before. To kick off the new year with yet another – male-female pairing: check; one of them is a spy/assassin: check – is not the most thrilling prospect but with many, many more to come in the next 12 months (Jamie Foxx and Cameron Diaz in Back in Action, Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt in The Fall Guy, Donald Glover’s Mr & Mrs Smith TV series), it’s about finding the silver lining where possible.

For Amazon’s Role Play, it’s more like bronze, the great victory being that it’s really not as atrocious as these films too often are, bar lazily stumbled over. A lot of that’s down to what these films are usually saved by – star power – and while the stars in question here might be slightly lower-wattage, in industry terms at least, there’s enough energy on display to almost power the whole thing, a sprint when a sleepwalk is usually deemed enough. It’s becoming a familiar mode for Kaley Cuoco, a long-time sitcom star who received an unlikely career boost from the breakout hit The Flight Attendant and has been chasing that high ever since. That show’s initially invigorati­ng yet ultimately exhausting mix of comedy and thriller was also seen in her next film – the Kevin Hart vehicle The Man from Toronto – and her next show – last year’s

 ?? ?? Kaley Cuoco and David Oyelowo in Role Play, not a total loss but still much too far from a win. Photograph: Prime Video
Kaley Cuoco and David Oyelowo in Role Play, not a total loss but still much too far from a win. Photograph: Prime Video

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