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Tag: Christopher Benstead

QuickView: The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare (2024)

“If Hitler isn’t playing by the Rules, then neither shall we?”

Winston Churchill

A heavily fictionalised portrayal of Operation Postmaster, a covert WW2 mission to disrupt Nazi U-boat resupply and allow the USA to cross the Atlantic and join the European theatre, Guy Ritchie delivers a pulpy action espionage film with plenty of crowd-pleasing Nazi killing. Ritchie plainly wants Ungentlemanly Warfare to be considered alongside Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds, even using a score filled with Western motifs to accompany his band of violent rogues. Although he attempts to ratchet tension in dialogue-heavy scenes with with Nazi officers, they feel closer to cutscenes from the recent Wolfenstein games and the cartoonish Heinrich Luhr poses no threat to Hans Landa’s standing in sinister cinematic villains. The Wolfenstein comparison is apt for the action too, with a hulking Alan Ritchson equally comfortable brawling or sniping with a bow, though Ritchie is oddly reserved when it comes to gore despite the high body count. Henry Cavill — once considered a prime contender for James Bond — is cast as one of the main inspirations for Ian Fleming’s character, and he brings a devilish charm to the dauntless Gus March-Phillips. This is the second time Ritchie has provided Cavill with a Bond-adjacent role, after casting him as Napoleon Solo in The Man from U.N.C.L.E.. The sun-soaked African espionage is enjoyable, manging to conjure a little of Casablanca in casino-owner Heron, though the pacing stumbles in expository dialogue. The third act, an assault under cover of night, is a dimly lit affair that proves considerably less engaging — the result is an underwhelming culmination to film that had succeeded through bombast.

6/10

QuickView: Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre (2023)

“You can’t catch this fish with conventional lures.”

Orson Fortune

Jason Statham received his start in Guy Ritchie’s Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch, before going on to carve out his own niche in the action genre. Coming full circle, Operation Fortune is Guy Ritchie’s attempt at making a Jason Statham Movie™ with a convoluted title that exposes its franchise-establishing designs. Orson Fortune is a skilled private contractor hired by the British Government for foreign espionage with slick, jet-setting action, at its best when one character is up close aided by teammates’ chatter through an earpiece and conveniently placed sniper coverage. Hugh Grant is clearly enjoying his charismatic villain era, his womanising arms dealer’s movie star obsession bearing coincidental similarity to Javi in last year’s The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (shot in early 2021, Operation Fortune was originally slated for release in March 2022, but was shelved due to its distributor’s insolvency, also explaining the Ukrainian references that now seem odd in the current climate). Whilst not enough to address my usual criticism of Ritchie’s casting, Aubrey Plaza is more than a token woman, her tech specialist being an integral part of Orson’s team — Plaza delivers her usual brand of quirky awkwardness but cannot elevate some atrocious dialogue. Though the characters may be new, Operation Fortune has a tendency toward tedious familiarity and it seems unlikely that the equally mercenery whims of Hollywood will grant this sporadically entertaining team another outing.

5/10

QuickView: The Gentlemen (2019)

“If you wish to be The King of the jungle, it’s not enough to act like a king. You must be The King. And there can be no doubt. Because doubt causes chaos and one’s own demise.”

Michael Pearson

Every few years, Guy Ritchie attempts to rekindle the magic of Lock, Stock and Snatch with an East End gangster movie, in essence to prove that he can still make “a Guy Ritchie film”. My expectations were decidedly muted after repeated misfires like Revolver and RocknRolla, but The Gentlemen marks his most successful return to those roots to date. The usual ingredients are present: a talented ensemble cast, heavy sarcasm, drugs, violence and dark humour, this time channelled by a considerably better script. Hugh Grant’s unexpected casting as a scumbag investigator works well and, although his endless narration becomes tiresome, as a storytelling device it allows Ritchie to flex a little creative flair from scene to scene. Yet none of this feels particularly fresh 20 years later and old issues remain, with only a single notable woman as well as unnecessary and unchallenged casual racism (albeit from characters we are not supposed to like). Ritchie may once have shaken up gangster filmmaking but now he is only acting like a king, within an industry obsessed with repeating the past. Nevertheless, for fans of this particular style, The Gentlemen offers enjoyable if anachronistic entertainment.

7/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2023 Priyan Meewella

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