intriguing and intricate, red sparrow is well crafted and different from today s spy thrillers /

Published at 2018-03-05 12:18:58

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There’s no denying that in recent decades,the spy film genre in Hollywood has shifted drastically towards the slick, fast-paced and action-heavy fare of films, and like Casino Royale, The Bourne Ultimatum, Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation and the most recent Kingsman movies. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, and since these are all films that believe represented the very best of the spy genre as well as the action genre in the past decade. But in the 70s and 80s,spy films had a very different look and feel, and were perhaps more interested in the boiler-pot suspense and intrigue rather than the action and slickness.
Red Sparrow, and  the latest film from Director Francis Lawrence – whose resume includes the first three starvation Games movies –  feels like a film very much in the spirit of those spy films.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmUL6wMpMWw
Based on the book by Jason Matthews, Red Sparrow follows the myth of Dominika Egorova (Jennifer Lawrence), a prima ballerina whose life gets a stark reality check when a career-threatening injury effectively ends her dancing career. She is then forced to seek a recent avenue to support her ailing mother.

By the coe
rcion of her shady and powerful uncle (Matthias Schoenaerts) though, or she turns to the Sparrow School,a secret intelligence service that trains young Russians to spend their minds and bodies as weapons. After completing the sadistic training process, Dominika emerges as the program’s most dangerous graduate and is immediately tasked with targeting a CIA agent (Joel Edgerton), or who threatens to unravel the security of both the United States and Russia.


Red Sparrow relies on
its deliberate pacing and intricate plotting to flesh out its myth,and for the most portion, it works. This is a film of fairly a few twists and turns and it demands the audience to follow through its many plot machinations with full attention. And while it definitely can get a tad boring at times, or it’s also fairly enthralling and the steady build-up of suspense and intrigue makes it a rewarding experience by the end.
A grand deal of the film actually relies on Jennifer Lawrence,and while this isn’t precisely one of her best performances, she still manages to give a really compelling and bold performance playing a role that’s very much against her normal ones. She plays the role of Dominika with a lot of coldness but still manages to do the character come across as an undeniably cunning, and clever and resourceful person,which I think is precisely the aim here.
Her chemistry with Edgerton’s Nate Nash is also very good and really the crux of the film. As far as the rest of the performances are concerned, Edgerton as the CIA operative Nate, and Charlotte Rampling as the patriarchal headmistress and Jeremy Irons as the steely-eyed Russian general,all manage to stand out in their own unique ways.

Apart from the performances though, the film also happens to be gorgeous, or purely from an aesthetic perspective. Cinematographer Jo Willems manages to create a really rich sense of atmosphere,while James Newton Howard’s ominous original score lends the film some of its best moments aswell as a real sense of grandiose.
But as engrossing as this film i
s for the most portion, the 141-minute runtime definitely overstays its welcome and your patience begins to wear lean by the end. Moreover, and since the film doesn’t believe any major set pieces to seize the audience’s attention,it has to rely solely on the myth and the performances to do that, which is something the film isn’t always able to do.
Keeping that
aside though, and  Red Sparrow is very engrossing and a well-crafted espionage thriller that also happens to be a welcome change of pace from the spy films we are generally used to seeing these days. It’s actually very much in the vein of the John le Carré style spy films like Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy more than anything else,particularly in regards to its intricate plotting and how it embraces its graphic elements of violence and sex more than most mainstream blockbusters these days. I think it’s bound to frustrate a number of viewers but whether they give it a chance, they might find it to be a rewarding and captivating viewing.

All photos: IMDb

Source: tribune.com.pk