THE GUNMAN: SEAN PENN KILLER PENTITO A TU PER TU CON UN PASSATO DIFFICILE DA LASCIARSI ALLE SPALLE, ANCHE PER UN AMORE COME JASMINE TRINCA
RECENSIONE ITALIANA in ANTEPRIMA e PREVIEW in ENGLISH by GUY LODGE (www.variety.com) - Dal 7 MAGGIO
(The Gunman; SPAGNA/REGNO UNITO/FRANCIA 2014; Noir; 115'; Produz.: Anton Capital Entertainment/ (ACE)/Canal+/Nostromo Pictures/Prone Gunman Productions/Silver Pictures/StudioCanal/TF1 Films Production ; Distribuz.: 01 Distribution)
Martin Terrier (Sean Penn) è un ex contractor delle forze speciali che presta servizio per una organizzazione non governativa in Congo. Martin ha intenzione di cedere le armi per dedicarsi all'amore della sua vita (Jasmine Trinca) ma il capo dell'organizzazione per cui lavora ha altri piani per lui e gli propone un ultimo compito da portare a termine. Tradito dalla organizzazione per cui lavorava, Terrier è costretto a fuggire in un sanguinoso viaggio in Africa e in Europa in un brutale gioco del gatto col topo. Sarà l'occasione obbligata per Terrier a fare i conti con il suo violento passato.
IN DETTAGLIO:
Jim Terrier (Sean Penn) ha un passato discutibile: forte di un addestramento speciale, ha operato in diverse zone pericolose come Agente Speciale Internazionale. Ma ora sta cercando di riscattarsi. Ă profondamente innamorato di Annie (Jasmine Trinca) e con lei è intenzionato a cambiare vita in un villaggio africano del Congo, sede di una ONG che si occupa di fornire acqua potabile agli abitanti. Ma per quanto si sforzi di cancellarlo, il passato lo ossessiona: sopravvissuto allâattentato di tre sicari è costretto a tornare in azione. Deve usare tutte le risorse per le quali è stato addestrato per sopravvivere e dimostrare la sua innocenza. Per scoprire di chi sia la mano che lo vuole morto si muoverĂ in lungo e in largo per lâEuropa, trovando sul suo cammino persone disposte a credere in lui (Dupont - Idris Elba), vecchie conoscenze dai trascorsi non proprio limpidi (Felix - Javier Bardem) ed ex compagni dalla morale discutibile (Cox - Mark Rylance).
SHORT SYNOPSIS:
A former Special Forces soldier and military contractor, suffering from PTSD, goes on the run from London to Barcelona and across Europe.
A sniper on a mercenary assassination team, working for an unknown client, kills the minister of mines of the Congo. Terrier's (Sean Penn's) successful kill shot forces him to go into hiding to protect himself and the members of the team from retribution. This includes abruptly abandoning his girlfriend who has no idea what is going on. The assassination, paid for by a foreign mining company, triggers wide spread chaos and death in an already inflamed Congo. Terrier returns to the Congo years later working for an NGO, but eventually finds himself to be the target of a paid hit squad somehow connected to the ministers assassination. This leads to immediate deaths and the endangerment of the people working around him, and forces him back into hiding. In trying to discover who has put a price on his head, he begins to reconnect to the members of his old assassination team, including his old girlfriend. Always aware there is no path to redemption for his crimes, he is also periodically ...
Commento critico (a cura di ROSS DI GIOIA)
Nel Congo insanguinato da una guerra civile senza via dâuscita, Jim Terrier (Sean Penn), uomo che per mantenere la pace abbraccia i conflitti, forte di un addestramento speciale, opera come Agente Speciale Internazionale in incognito. Ufficialmente, tuttavia, Jim lavora in un villaggio con compiti di peace keeping, garantendo lâincolumitĂ dei volontari di una ONG del posto. Una versione questa a cui crede perfino la sua compagna, Annie (Jasmine Trinca), medico pure lei impegnata in una ONG, e con la quale Jim vorrebbe âaccasarsiâ. Câè però di mezzo una ultima missione da compiere - lâuccisione di un noto esponente politico locale - che reca con sĂŠ una condizione: bisogna scomparire definitivamente dal Paese, lasciandosi dietro tutto, Annie compresa.
Ad assassinio compiuto, dunque, Jim se ne va pieno di rimorsi per rifarsi una nuova vita, finendo per scavare pozzi dâacqua potabile per i poveri dellâAfrica. Ma quando il passato sembra alle spalle,
tre sicari lo cercano per âripagarloâ proprio per quellâultimo lavoretto in Congo. Jim allora cerca di rimettere insieme i pezzi del mosaico e parte per l'Europa alla caccia dei colleghi dellâepoca Cox (Mark Rylance) e Felix (Javier Bardem), mentre lâagente dellâInterpol Dupont (Idris Elba) tesse lentamente la sua telaâŚ
Niente al cinema riesce meglio del doppio/triplo/quadruplo gioco. LâavrĂ pensata cosĂŹ il regista Pierre Morel (Banlieue 13, Taken) accarezzando lâidea del progetto di The Gunman. E deve essere stato talmente bravo ad intortarlo a Sean Penn (perchĂŠ altrimenti non si spiegaâŚ) da accaparrarsi cosĂŹ il due volte premio Oscar (ma câè anche Bardem, qui col rispolverato ghigno di Skyfall); e Penn, a sua volta, avrĂ pensato che non si fosse troppo lontani dalle parti di The Interpreter. Câè un problema però: Morel non è Sydney Pollack. E si vede. Anzi, la presenza di Jasmine Trinca ci fa venire in mente L'ultima alba,
con Bruce Willis e Monica Bellucci (potenza delle improbabili accoppiate italoamericane da grande schermo, si suppone). Francamente noioso, sempre pronto a mettere in scena una svolta o che poi non arriva o che hai previsto ancora prima del cambio di scena, il plot arranca per quasi due ore, avvitandosi sul tentativo di dirci che âno, câè di piĂš oltre alla curiositĂ di rivedere Penn in un action e come se la cava Trinca ad HollywoodâŚâ. GiĂ , Trinca. Ugualmente lei ci mette il mestiere e non sfigura affatto, ma resta un corpo estraneo in un film che chiede troppo ai suoi esilissimi fondamentali. Questâultimi ancora piĂš confusi se si pensa che si passa dalla denuncia per la situazione congolese (è fiction, ma la realtĂ delle cose in molti Paesi del Continente Nero non è diversa) al massacro in una arena di tori a Barcellona⌠come dire: non tutte le battaglie sociali
hanno pari dignità . Un monolite, questo The Gunman, ad un cinema che paga sempre piÚ dazio e che viene punito dagli spettatori: negli Usa è stato un flop pauroso, incassando poco piÚ di 10 milioni di dollari.
Secondo commento critico (a cura di GUY LODGE, www.variety.com)
SEAN PENN'S ODD ATTEMPT TO REFASHION HIMSELF AS A MIDDLE-AGED ACTION HERO WON'T GIVE LIAM NEESON ANY SLEEPLESS NIGHTS.
âThe Guns, Manâ might have been a more apt title for âThe Gunman,â given how much of Pierre Morelâs latest passport-brandishing shoot-âem-up is dedicated to showcasing Sean Pennâs unexpectedly ripped physique. Sadly, Pennâs veiny, sweat-glazed biceps are the most objectively impressive feature of this rote, humorless thriller, a distinctly unconvincing attempt to refashion the star â who also co-wrote and produced â as a middle-aged action hero in the Liam Neeson mold. Covering similar stylistic territory to Morelâs megahit âTaken,â with notional political context tacked on to fit its leading manâs public persona, this curious blend of exploitation pic and vanity project certainly wonât be inaugurating an equivalent franchise, but may hit its target in ancillary.
Itâs been 10 years since two-time Oscar winner Penn last headlined a multiplex-ready genre
pic (Sydney Pollackâs comparatively upscale âThe Interpreter,â co-starring Nicole Kidman), but thereâs no precedent in his career for one quite like âThe Gunman,â which puts the 54-year-old actor through repeated bouts of violent, frequently shirtless badassery. Prior to the release of âTaken,â Neeson was a similarly unlikely candidate for tough-guy reinvention, though he had mass-franchise credentials and took to B-movie stardom with a gravelly presence and deadpan wit that Penn, for all his physical and thespian prowess, canât quite muster here. When the imposingly charismatic Idris Elba pops up in a long-teased but perfunctory supporting role in the picâs second half, itâs hard not to think both actors might have been better off swapping roles.
âI donât want to do this sâ any more,â complains Pennâs Special Forces soldier-turned-assassin Jim Terrier â a character name that could hardly be more patently writer-devised if it were Jack Russell. Whether the allusion to
Danny Gloverâs deathless âLethal Weaponâ catchphrase is intentional, or merely indicative of âThe Gunmanâsâ paucity of fresh ideas, Terrierâs stone-faced weariness makes him an oddly difficult figure to root for. Penn has always excelled playing damaged human figures; perhaps his hand in the script (which he co-adapted, with Don MacPherson and Pete Travis, from a 1981 pulp novel by Frenchman Jean-Patrick Manchette) accounts for the degree of moral compromise in Terrier, a well-meaning liberal atoning for corrupt acts in his past. Yet in presenting the character as both a fundamentally flawed hero and a rule-busting daredevil who literally goes surfing in unsafe waters â cue our first extended gaze at Pennâs brick-built torso â the star and filmmakers seek to have it both ways. This unhappy balance between right-on realism and heightened derring-do goes for the film at large.
A none-too-authentic-looking Democratic Republic of Congo provides the backdrop for a 2006-set
prologue: Terrier and a group of European ex-military associates have been paid by an unspecified authority to execute the countryâs minister of mining. As the designated trigger, Terrier is forced to flee the country after successfully carrying out the mission, leaving behind his (naturally) decades-younger g.f., Annie (Jasmine Trinca), who is unaware of the plot. In the wake of the assassination, the country is plunged into a civil war: Needless to say, âThe Gunmanâ is entirely blithe in its fabrication of Third World history.
Eight years later, Terrier is back in the Congo, mildly PTSD-afflicted and worthily digging wells for an NGO. Though his mercenary days are behind him, other parties arenât willing to forgive and forget: After narrowly escaping an attempt on his life, he jets back to London, enlisting the help of grizzled comrade Stanley (Ray Winstone, on standard Cockney-geezer setting) to identify his attackers. His investigation also leads
him to estranged colleagues Cox (Mark Rylance), now a suit working for their former contractors, and Felix (Javier Bardem, dripping smarm and hair oil), a wily Barcelona-based businessman with a range of stakes in Africa. To Terrierâs greater consternation, he has also coerced a reluctant Annie â an intelligent professional woman with, apparently, no romantic agency of her own â into marriage.
From this setup, the action skips through a predictable succession of standoffs and shootouts across Spain and Gibraltar â directed with anonymous efficiency by Morel, albeit rather more distinctively scored by a typically zealous Marco Beltrami. While glossily shot on location in Spain, South Africa and England by Flavio Labiano, the filmâs larger setpieces donât always exploit their scenic backdrops as creatively as they might â though a climactic chase through Barcelonaâs iconic La Monumental bullfighting ring does take the beast by the horns, so to speak. (A
closing-credits caveat acknowledging the cityâs 2012 ban on the sport further shows up the dated material.)
With every principal player turning out to have more or less the precise agenda viewers will have suspected from the beginning, the supporting cast goes strictly through the motions. Though he enjoys second billing, Elba appears only at the 77-minute mark as an Interpol agent of initially ambiguous allegiance. His snappy presence is welcome, though heâs burdened with some of the filmâs most cumbersome scripting â chiefly a tortuous sustained metaphor about treehouses and termites that he and Penn lurch through with unaccountably straight faces. Potentially electrifying supporting players like Rylance and Bardem are given few notes to play that merely capable journeymen could not; in her first English-language film, the usually luminous Trinca canât inject much gumption into a role that amounts to little more than passive ornamentation for the protagonist.
For âThe Gunmanâ has
been conceived as Pennâs film through and through, no matter how uncomfortably he carries it. Every move that a George Clooney might rakishly pull off â say, stealing a blazer from the back of a strangerâs chair en route to a dinner date â Penn makes seem borderline sociopathic. Itâs his singular intensity and eccentricity as a performer that lends this otherwise form-following throwaway what unusual angles it has, yet thatâs also the reason the film fails to work on its own beef-brained terms. âTake care of your mind,â a doctor warns Terrier midway through the narrative; itâs sound advice, too, for the star, whose notable prior credits behind the camera make this self-developed vehicle all the more surprising at this stage in an illustrious career.