Friday, 23 January 2015

Knight Owl's Review of Taken 3; It Ends Here (Thank God)



This movie makes me sad.

One of my New Years resolutions is to see more movies and write about them. I'm starting out strong, but already behind. It doesn't help that the first movie of the new year that I sit down to see is what I can only hope is the last of a franchise unable to live up to its first entry.

I can gush over Taken all day, so I'll keep it short by saying that the film was an unexpected hit and, in my opinion, a perfect action movie. Short in length, simple plot, heavy on the violence and threat thereof. It also gave new life to the career of a man I've always been a fan of but never clicked with the mainstream. Taken is inarguably one of the best action films in recent memory, and possibly one of the best ever. But as with any other moderately successful film these days, it just had to have a sequel.

Taken 2 was a shadow of its predecessor, neutering both the main character and the franchise itself as quickly as possible. The change in director was evident and not for the better. What should have been an easy path into a franchise became a sad extension of the first film, much like Quantum of Solace was to Casino Royale. I was willing to forgive Taken 2 if the third installment gave me what I wanted out of the second. Needless to say, Taken 3 failed spectacularly.

In my mind, the logical path that the Taken franchise was simple: Liam Neeson's work in the first film earns him a spot back on his old team, also established in the first film. They then go off on hijinks involving rescuing highly valued captives from shady individuals with broken wine bottles, threatening phone conversations and general badassery. Instead, Taken 3 becomes a far too convoluted whodunnit mystery a la The Fugitive with not so much action as there is a whole bunch of people on cellphones.

The plot we are given is as such: Old man Liam is framed for a murder and must go on the lam using his very particular set of skills to both evade capture and uncover who set him up and why. Even this synopsis sounds simple, but there is layer upon layer of unnecessary subplot that makes the film seem hours longer than it was. Also would have been fine, had there been as much action as the previous films. There wasn't, and the action we do get is over-edited and choppy. Extremely hard to watch. And with at least 30 minutes without the only reason to see the film (Neeson) onscreen, it's easy to forget why you're even there.

The big problem I have with this movie is simply that it falls into SO MANY TROPES, and everyone's the worse for it. First off, when I said Neeson had to 'evade capture', what I meant was that he beat the everliving crap out of every cop that crossed his path. Now, this has been a bit of a problem for me in every 'the hero's been framed' action film I've ever seen (which is an approximate fuck ton). So, you're innocent. That's great and all, but laying smacks down on every cop in line of sight might not be the best way to make your case. Now, even if your innocence for the murder is proven, you're going to jail forever on a billion counts of resisting arrest and assaulting officers. And that's after you get many batons and tazers shoved up unpleasant places.

And hey, while we're at that, you might not have to run so fast if you didn't make yourself seem so god damn guilty. Neeson makes every innocent-man-finds-crime-scene mistake you can. He fondles the murder weapon, he disturbs the body, he tries to talk the cops out of taking him in, and wraps it all up with a bunch of THROAT PUNCHING. This, ladies and gentlemen, is a man with a very particular set of skills which, I imagine, involved him being even the slightest bit covert. If anyone should have an understanding as to what's going on, it's him. Setting stuff like this up was his job, and the past two films were spent establishing that it was a job he was pretty god damn stellar at. But here he is, doing a fine job of being an asshole to the people trying to find a killer. You're losing your touch, Liam.

I know that this review has been living on the negative side of the film, but there's good reason. At the end of the day, a film franchise that was once razor sharp has completely lost its edge. Everything that I liked about Taken 3 was a direct callback from the first film (ie. Liam hiding under a body to surprise oncoming bad guy). I truly hope that either this is the true death of the franchise, or that new life is somehow breathed into it. Trust me, if you're looking for an action film on par with Taken...well, just rewatch Taken. It's still great.

Knight Owl

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