Showing posts with label Equalizer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equalizer. Show all posts

Friday, September 1, 2023

The Equalizer 3

8/10

In what appears to be the final film in the trilogy (at least for Denzel Washington; I can see them bringing in a new Equalizer), Robert McCall (Washington) is injured after a mission and has to convalesce at a small coastal Italian town. He ends up liking the place and soon can't keep a blind eye to the merciless hold organized crime has on it.

This felt like a good note for McCall to go out on. Okay, so all the story beats are very predictable especially when it comes to the villains (sadly, like the last film, the movie can't come up with a rightful to successor to the first film's Teddy Rensen, who was in my opinion one of the best action movie villains in recent years.) Given that E2 wasn't as good as the first but definitely made the effort to make the threat something different, it's a little disappointing to just go back to fighting a foreign crime family like in E1.

But, when you get down to it, this is a well-made predictable movie where the lines and characters work well enough. Washington's excellent performance remains the best part. He is able to portray so much about the character and with just a look. Washington continues to portray a man who wants to do good but does violent things to achieve that. A man who always gives the baddies a chance to go the peaceful route but is merciless when they decline. It's also fun to watch McCall, because the guy's got training and seeing his dark strategy is as fascinating as the action as he clearly has the mental edge over his opponents.

Speaking of the action, this may be the most violent of all the movies. (Course, it's been a while since I saw the first two.) It feels like the movie was taking a page from John Wick, but McCall is far more brutal and exacting. There are a couple of the big confrontation scenes that will really stick in your memory.

Moving the location outside the U.S. was a nice change of pace. The setting they chose for the town is breathtaking. Director Antoine Fuqua really had an eye for showcasing Italian architecture and decorations.

Recommended. I'd rank this below 1 and above 2. Story ain't original and man is the hardcore action worth the watch.

Monday, May 29, 2023

Equalizer- Season 3

7/10

Former CIA agent Robyn McCall (played by Queen Latifah) continues to use her skill set to help the little guy with problems the system can't/won't help.

Not much has changed since the last two seasons. The episodes continue to be a bunch of fairly entertaining albeit not complex adventures, and the storylines remain varied. (Nice thing about the show is that McCall's mission is broad enough that the writers aren't limited to certain situations.)  There is more of a focus on McCall's relationship and past with the CIA which worked pretty well. 

And the same as previous seasons, you've got a sprinkling of "special message" episodes that feel too simplistic like they're talking down to the audience.

Though Queen Latifah is likable, she isn't always able to make the dialogue work. (She tends to talk in the same tone.)

I've been a fan of McCall's daughter Delilah (Laya DeLeon Hayes) and aunt Vi (Lorraine Touissaint) and though their stories often aren't connected to the main storyline, they've usually been good. However, half-way through this season, the stories started to bug me. It might be that there are a lot more isolated single-episode storylines, which start to show the same issues as the A-plots: social message stories that simplistically talk down to you and wrapped up way too quickly. The fact that the two of them keep running into these issues comes off as unrealistic. (However, when it comes to the racial-focused episodes, I apologize if I'm being white privileged about the situation. I'm not a black person in America and can't attest to how often you would run into these situations if you were.) Also, it feels that Vi has become completely right too many times and is starting to come off as sanctimonious. Don't get me wrong, Touissaint does a great job at both being at being caring but also bring on the righteous indignation when needed, and it's nice to see her fight against racists who'd wrong her or her niece, but in less high stakes situations it feels like she always needs to be in control of the situation and narrative. (The restaurant subplot is the best example of this.)

Kinda recommended. I know I've gone into the cons more than the flaws, but the show's still enjoyable, there's just no need for specifics for the positives. It's just you're average turn-off-your-brain and have fun CBS show.