Review: Wanted
Filed under: Action, New Releases, Universal, Theatrical Reviews, Comic/Superhero/Geek

If Timur Bekmambetov is the Russian David Fincher, then Wanted is his Fight Club: bloody, brutal, funny, lightly satirical, and all about a nobody who shakes himself from his reverie and becomes a real man. There aren't many deep themes here (not as many as there are supposed to be, anyway), but who cares? The stylized violence and unapologetically ludicrous action sequences are the selling point, and Wanted delivers those by the blood-soaked truckload.
Wanted is about a Chicago office drone named Wesley Gibson (James McAvoy) whose life is so insubstantial that he gets zero hits when he Googles himself. But like Neo before him (only played by an actual actor, rather than a plank of driftwood), Wesley is rescued from his drudgery by a secret organization that wants to tell him who he really is and what his destiny can be. That's right, the Mormons.
No, kidding. The group is known as The Fraternity (but they let girls in, too), and it began a thousand years ago when a group of weavers decided that weaving was boring and they should become assassins. Today the group is run by Sloan (Morgan Freeman), with headquarters hidden in an actual textile factory. Every guy in the place is tough and mean, a real brute of the loom, if you will, and they show Wesley the ropes of shooting people from a distance. That's right: Wesley snipes. (That concludes the pun portion of this review.)
Aided by his new handler, Fox (Angelina Jolie), Wesley learns to control the powers that have been in his DNA all along. Those anxiety attacks he's been taking pills for? It's actually his body speeding up so he can react and think more quickly than the average person.
Wesley is needed for a particular mission to assassinate a particular person; why it must be him who does the job is a revelation saved for later, along with many (perhaps too many) other twists and turns and crosses and double-crosses that come spilling out in the last act. In the meantime, Wesley studies The Frat's history and learns, from Sloan, how their targets are chosen. He takes it on faith that these targets are all bad guys who deserve to die. And why wouldn't he? Sloan is Morgan Freeman, for crying out loud. You'd believe anything that guy told you.
Angelina Jolie manages to kick some butt (and show her own, briefly), though I think her fans might wish she'd been given more to do. She comes off as a supporting character rather than a co-star, and aloof in a very Angelina Jolie sort of way. The star, James McAvoy, acquits himself well enough in his first big action role, displaying more diverse talents than his performances in staid period pieces like Atonement would have indicated.
Bekmambetov, who made the Night Watch series of vampire films in Russia, makes his English-language debut with Wanted. Based on J.G. Jones and Mark Millar's comic book, it's a good fit for the Kazakhstan-born filmmaker, who has already demonstrated his love for creative violence and thorny mythologies. In Wanted, as in the Night Watch films, you get the feeling you're never expected to take any of it too seriously because Bekmambetov himself clearly doesn't. He's laughing right along with us. This is much better than what usually happens with outrageous action films, where we laugh at how ridiculous it is while the director says, "Hey, why are they laughing? That was supposed to be cool!"
Like Fincher (and like the Wachowskis, whose Matrix this film occasionally resembles), Bekmambetov loves intricate camera movement and CGI-assisted tracking shots. He also loves to film violence. He delights in it -- not in the violence itself, but in the physical movement associated with it, the way a bullet arcs through the air or a person's body reacts as it's hit. Wanted is full of such visual poetry, as well as several slam-bang action scenes that suggest the Russian fellow might have a long career ahead of him in Hollywood, if he wants it.









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-27-2008 @ 11:53PM
madgamer said...
I thought this movie was pretty awesome. I liked that it didn't focus on Jolie too much just because she is more recognizable or something. The action was over the top but really cool.
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6-28-2008 @ 2:17AM
eugene said...
Saw it tonight. Had a lot of fun and some great visuals. The big shoot'em up at the end was a blast .
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6-28-2008 @ 2:31AM
Scott K said...
I enjoyed the hell out of it too. Only the bit at the beginning reminded me of the Matrix. Later it reminded me more of Equilibrium, but it didn't remind me of these movies in a negative copycat way. Great fun.
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6-28-2008 @ 4:14AM
Scott K said...
So I didn't read the full review before posing my first comment. Brute of the loom! Good form, sir.
6-28-2008 @ 6:10AM
pete thomson said...
When not running up a tailcoat or kilt in my favorite Harris Tweed I like nothing better than killing the odd bloke to - of course- save thousands! What about the producer who greenlighted this nonsense? Id be happy to knit him concrete shoes! This is not of the standard of Fight Club, or anywhere near it- its just another bad summer movie to add to the list of bad summer movies far this year.
How many people died on that train, none of them were saved by soft, comfortable, natural fibres? One tedious CGI car chase after another. Binary knitwear and peanut butter filled mice bombs. The real twist though was having Morgan Freeman (everybody's favorite Papa Smurf!!) as a baddie- We didnt see that coming! At least the teenage boys will get to masturbate over the sight of Angelina's bottom. She did look incredibly bored through the whole sorry film. James Mcavoy- a fellow scot - did sport a fetching line of cardigans no doubt all woven up on the mad loom. Im wondering did the loom also weave the script? Im off to see a documentary about the Antarctic today at the Edinburgh Film Festival. the oldest continuously running film festival in the world. Ill be careful to just wear synthetic fibers on the off chance my tank top is really a tank and tries to fire on the audience.
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6-30-2008 @ 2:25AM
JeanCarlos said...
Thank you SO much for ruining the ending.
6-28-2008 @ 6:16AM
pete thomson said...
you enjoyed the hell out of it? Good for you !!!
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6-28-2008 @ 12:51PM
Scott K said...
Wow, I hope my future comments land more favorably with the Scottish crowd.
Good luck with the film festival, you know, the oldest continuously running festival in the world. I'm assuming they only let true aficionados in.
Now I'm off to write some comments on other sites about how much I dislike stuff. It always makes both the creators and audience think about what they've done.
6-28-2008 @ 6:20AM
cherjr said...
great review. thx!
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6-28-2008 @ 9:46PM
trouble said...
I just saw Wanted and it was awesome. Violent,scary, action - packed---fun fun fun.
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6-29-2008 @ 12:43PM
Bob said...
It's nice to get vindication at last. I have been a vocal voice in giving this film a chance before all the negative prejudging of it that has been so predominant on this site. It always looked like a film that could really deliver the goods and now after seeing it..w0w..does it ever! With an over $50 million weekend gross (well above all expectations) it has apparently delivered in more ways than one!
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9-01-2008 @ 4:13AM
Clumpy said...
HEAVY SPOILERS IN REFERENCE TO EARLIER COMMENTS:
The only comparison I have with "The Matrix" is that he goes and kills a bunch of people near the end who don't necessarily deserve it. Only one man was really guilty, so why didn't he find a way not to have to kill all of his old comrades? He felt so guilty over killing the Russian, but he just would have killed him at the end when he stormed the place anyway. Did he think that just because Sloan was guilty everybody needed to go?
This movie goes against the dumb yet fulfilling movie it wants to be by invalidating everything we saw previously at the end. You can really only see this once.
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