Wanted Movie Review
Wanted Review

"Wanted" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Timur BekmambetovProducer : Adam Siegel,Gary Barber,Marc Silvestri
Screenwiter : Michael Brandt,Derek Haas,Chris Morgan
Starring : James McAvoy,Morgan Freeman,Angelina Jolie,Common,Thomas Kretschmann
A scrawny, self-loathing office drone gets plucked from his humdrum existence by
a steely, gun-wielding super babe, is mentored by a Zen warrior with limitless intelligence
but limited patience, then endures harsh physical training to prepare for a deadly miss
ion only he can complete.
What sounds an awful lot like The Matrix is actually Wanted, an adaptation of Mark Millar's
2004 comic book miniseries by style-conscious Russian filmmaker Timur Bekmambetov.
His name may ring a bell with adventurous moviegoers who sampled his frenzied vampire
thriller Night Watch and its muddled sequel, Day Watch. And though it's unlikely Bekmambetov
will become a household name once Wanted explodes on the scene, a wider audience
certainly will become more familiar with the director's uniquely kinetic aesthetics.
James McAvoy, star of last year's romantic Oscar bait Atonement, suppresses his thick
Scottish accent to play Wesley, an American nobody with serious girl troubles. His
boss (Lorna Scott), a boorish walrus of a woman, makes it her business to berate
Wesley's every decision. His girlfriend (Kristen Hager) thinks so little of Wesley
that she barely hides the fact she's sleeping with his best friend. So why would
Wesley trust the pouty-lipped temptress (Angelina Jolie) who tells him he's the latest
in a long line of assassins sworn to a secret society dubbed the Fraternity?
The bullets, bodies, blood droplets, cars, trucks, and trains start flying before
Wesley or I can answer that question. Jolie's character, properly named Fox, barely
finishes her introduction before she and Wesley are attacked by Cross (Thomas Kretschmann),
a rival assassin who reportedly offed Wesley's absentee father (David O'Hara). Following
a memorably noisy car chase that's highlighted by Jolie turning her body into a gorgeously
lethal hood ornament, Wanted fills us in on the Fraternity's mythology and mission
statement.
Morgan Freeman plays Morpheus... uh, Sloan, head of the Fraternity and Wesley's new
supervisor. We meet various Fraternity members blessed with succinct names like Gunsmith
(Common), the Exterminator (Konstantin Khabensky), and the Repairman (Marc Warren), who
heals broken bones and gaping wounds with a gooey white-blood-cell bath that looks
like melted marshmallows and candle wax. Finally, Wesley learns of his ultimate purpose:
Avenge his father's death by executing Cross.
Detractors will argue that Bekmambetov's treatment of Millar's material bears more
than a passing resemblance to Matrix, and it's tough to disagree. Beyond the recruitment
and training of a Neo-esque anti-hero, the film relies on a reality-bending technique
that allows bullets to curve their path on the whim of the person firing the gun.
Factor in the gratuitous fire fights, gravity-altering choreography, and bombastic action
sequences, and Wanted starts to feel like the Grand Theft Auto video game ballooned to
theatrical proportions.
But there are more than enough original thrills to distance Wanted from its assorted
predecessors. Bekmambetov brings a bizarre and often morbid take to action violence
-- witness the bloody tooth that flies through the air after Wesley smashes his cheating
friend in the mouth with a keyboard -- and that profane tactic fits this cast as
they play against type.
After embodying a benevolent God in various comedies, Freeman goes ice cold as a
devilish killer. McAvoy bulks up physically, then backs up that build with a tough-guy
attitude. His final line will have you pumping a fist as you exit the theater. But
it's Jolie, in particular, who finds menace and sensuality in her otherwise inadequately
written role. Best known off-screen as a harbinger of peace in impoverished nations
and serial mom, the actress reminds us how sexy she can look while hanging off the
hood of a sports car and pointing a sawed-off shotgun at her pursuing enemy. Now that's
range.
Adopt a child, get a free tattoo!
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





