THE
RHYTHM SECTION (2020)
Starring
Blake Lively, Jude Law, Sterling K. Brown, Max Casella, Daniel Mays,
Geoff Bell, Richard Brake. Directed by Reed Morano. (109 min)
ON
BLU-RAY FROM PARAMOUNT
Review
by Tiger the Terrible😼
Though
it will never be mistaken for a great film, there are two things that
make The Rhythm Section worth checking out.
First,
it features a believable protagonist. Since losing her entire family
in a plane crash, Stephanie Patrick (Blake Lively) has descended into
prostitution and drug addiction. Then she meets a reporter who claims
the plane crash was a terrorist attack and has evidence provided by
ex-MI-6 operative Iain Boyd (Jude Law). After the reporter is
murdered, she takes his research and seeks Boyd’s help in
avenging her family. He reluctantly agrees to train her to strike
back at the organization responsible.
But
Stephanie doesn’t morph into a fearless, indestructible
supersoldier. Throughout the entire film, she is clearly in over her head and screws up a lot,
sometimes making things worse. Dumb
luck saves her more often than any acquired skills, which makes some
of the action sequences feel a bit more down-to-earth than those in
similar films.
"Lady, you suck at Hide & Seek." |
Second,
Blake Lively goes all-in with a dedicated performance. She
effectively displays the hopelessness, nihilism, anger and wrath
required for Stephanie to be convincing. Considering her statuesque
beauty, I suspect the temptation to turn her into another Atomic
Blonde was strong, but aside from a brief – and pointless –
scene where she poses as a high-end call girl, Lively looks suitably
strung-out, weary and beaten down by life.
She’s
the only interesting character in a film that loses focus about
half-way through, when it strays from being a straight revenge
thriller and throws in unnecessary plot turns, even briefly turning
Stephanie into a killer-for-hire. Once she starts trotting the globe
like some kind of grunge-era assassin, the story grows
increasingly convoluted, to say nothing of implausible.
Narrative
quibbles aside, The Rhythm Section may be unremarkable, but
it’s certainly watchable on a dull evening (which we all have
plenty of, right now). Blake Lively makes her character compelling
enough to keep things interesting during the duller stretches, while
director Reed Morano strings together a few nifty action scenes.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
FEATURETTES
- “Stephanie’s Journey”; “Fight or Flight”; “Never
Leave Second Gear”; “One-Shot Explosion”; “Designing The
Rhythm Section.”
DELETED/EXTENDED
SCENES
DVD
& DIGITAL COPIES
KITTY CONSENSUS:
NOT BAD. LIKE CAT CHOW.
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