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Film Features Film/TV

The Gray Man

What would you do if you had essentially unlimited funds?

If you answered “make a spy movie,” then you have something in common with Anthony and Joe Russo. The brothers who first attracted attention directing episodes of Arrested Development struck it as big as you can possibly strike it with the two-part climax to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. The bladder-busting, superhero punch-a-thons grossed a collective $4.8 billion, with Endgame delivering the most profitable weekend in the 120-year history of the industry.

With no more worlds to conquer, the Russos can write their own ticket. Who wouldn’t say yes to history’s most successful film team? And so, we have The Gray Man, at $200 million, the most expensive film Netflix has ever produced.

It is my duty to be skeptical about mega-budget projects as awash in hubris as The Gray Man, but I must point out that it is an adaptation of a book by Memphian Mark Greaney, who spent a decade struggling in the service industry while he worked on his novels. His 2009 book The Gray Man was a sleeper hit with the techno-thriller crowd, and when Tom Clancy passed away, Greaney took over the Jack Ryan franchise, while also producing a hit spy series of his own.

Greaney’s titular hero is Sierra Six (Ryan Gosling), one of a team of semi-reformed criminals recruited by CIA honcho Donald Fitzroy (Billy Bob Thornton) to do stuff that requires both extreme moral flexibility and plausible deniability. But, as scheming CIA analyst Suzanne Brewer (Jessica Henwick) sarcastically points out, you take a group of hardened criminals, give them state-of-the-art weapons and the best training in the world, and something’s bound to go wrong.

The thing that goes wrong arrives in the person of director Denny Carmichael (Regé-Jean Page), who takes over when Fitzroy retires and decides to tie up his predecessor’s loose ends. Six is assigned to do a quiet assassination with a sniper rifle, but when a little girl gets in the way of his target, he can’t take the shot.

Yes, this is the type of movie where square-jawed men unironically bark, “Take the shot!”

Instead, he engages the target hand-to-hand in the middle of a giant fireworks display that cost more than Best Picture-winner Nomadland. And that’s pretty much all you need to know about The Gray Man. It’s a spy story grounded in the real world, so there are no spaceships or interdimensional portals or guys in flying armored suits. Instead, Netflix’s scratch pile funds international travel, sweeping outdoor set-pieces, and meticulously dressed interiors, many of which explode for poorly explained reasons. Psycho superspy antagonist Lloyd Hansen (Chris Evans) swigs Glenlivet while he directs mercenary fireteams from his French chateau HQ. When he gets mad, he doesn’t just flip a desk — he sweeps the best-stocked minibar you’ve ever seen onto the floor and grabs the complimentary bottle of Vicodin on his way out.

Sierra Six is basically 007 without the Cold War baggage. James Bond was an ideological warrior for queen and capital; Six is a gig-economy contractor caught in the breakdown of the nation state’s monopoly on violence. He has as much loyalty to the United States as a DoorDasher has to Applebee’s. He only cares about his partner Dani (Ana de Armas), who’s perpetually saving his life, and Fitzroy’s niece Claire (Julia Butters), whose life he’s perpetually saving.

Evans is delicious playing against type as the heavy. The key to his success is that he’s always having fun doing whatever goofy thing the Russos throw at him. When he drags a distressed damsel into a full-on Shining hedge maze while practically twirling his mustache, vaudeville villain-style, you can’t help but “Hell yeah!” The Gray Man breaks no new ground, but it’s so much fun to watch the Russos burn Netflix’s money, you won’t care. And if the next Ian Fleming is a bartender from Memphis, that’s all the better.

The Gray Man is now playing at multiple locations and streaming on Netflix beginning July 22nd.

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Film Features Film/TV

New At The Movies: Paris, Love Triangles, and Crawdads

Hollywood is enjoying its first real post-pandemic summer blockbuster season, which means most weekends have been featuring only one or two new major new releases. But this weekend’s slate of new releases offers the most choice we’ve seen in months.

The most expensive release of the weekend has a local connection. The Gray Man is based on a book by Memphian Mark Greaney. It stars Ryan Gosling as Sierra Six, an above-top-secret CIA operative who has to go on the lam after uncovering some major government misdeeds. Retired Captain America Chris Evans plays against type as the psychopath hit man sent to track him down. Directors Anthony and Joe Russo have worked with Evans before on some small independent movies you probably haven’t heard of called Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame.

Next up is another adaptation of a work by a Southern writer. Delia Owens is a zoologist from Georgia whose debut novel Where The Crawdads Sing became a huge bestseller in 2020. Reese Witherspoon is the executive producer of the film version, directed by Olivia Newman. Daisy Edgar-Jones stars as Kya, nicknamed The Marsh Girl by the inhabitants of the small North Carolina town near where she lives. She’s accused of murdering the town’s star quarterback Chase (Harris Dickinson), and as an outcast, she makes a convenient scapegoat for the mysterious death. Swampy, Southern gothic intrigue ensues.

Lesley Manville earned an Academy Award nomination for Phantom Thread. Paul Gallico’s novel Mrs. ‘Arris Goes To Paris has been adapted for the screen three times. Director Anthony Fabian makes it four. Manville stars as an English maid who becomes obsessed with her boss’ Dior wardrobe, and embarks on an adventure to the City of Lights. French things ensue.

She Will is an intriguing folk horror from director Charlotte Colbert and IFC Films. Alice Krige stars as a film star recovering from cancer in a rural estate best known for a history of witch burning. Turns out the witch ghosts are pissed. Wouldn’t you be?

Gabby Giffords was a Congressional Representative from Arizona married to NASA astronaut Mark Kelly. Then, in 2011, one of her campaign events was attacked by a man with an assault rifle. Six people were killed. Giffords was shot in the head, but survived. Now, Kelly is a Senator and Giffords works for sensible gun control. Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down is a timely documentary from CNN Films.

French director Claire Denis has been quietly making great films since 1999’s Beau Travail. Her latest is Both Sides of the Blade. The great Juliette Binoche stars as Sarah, a Parisian radio DJ who is caught between her comfortable life with husband Jean (Vincent Lindon) and her sexy ex Francois (Gregorie Colin). Who doesn’t love a good erotic thriller?