So, it’s
July, you know what that means
Neeson
Month!
Liam Neeson,
the man with a very particular set of skills, we’ve seen crop up in a couple of
movies already. He had a cameo in the Dark Knight Rises and he played Good
Cop/Bad Cop in the Lego Movie, but we’re going to look at a few more examples
of his work, both the good, and some of the bad too. But why not start with the
movie that coined the phrase I used earlier in this paragraph, Taken
Released in
2009, Taken was a huge hit, making over $200m on its modest $25m budget. It’s
reception critically was a little more mixed, holding 59% on Rotten Tomatoes
with an average 5.8/10 and a 50 on Metacritic. It was also involved in some
very strange controversy when someone fraudulently said this was based on a
true story. Turned out to be all lies of course, but still kind of intriguing.
But to the movie itself.
Ex-CIA agent
Bryan Mills (Liam Neeson) attempts to use his time in retirement to bond with
his daughter, Kim (Maggie Grace) but as she heads to Paris she becomes the
victim of kidnapping, a word avoided in the film for some reason. So, since the
police can’t do sh*t thanks to the corruption under Jean-Claude Pitrel (Olivier
Rabourdin) it’s up to Brian to use some minor detective work and his very
particular set of skills to rescue his daughter before it’s too late.
Neeson is an
excellent actor and it’s this that defined his role as an action star, and he
puts in a good performance. Maggie Grace… just doesn’t look 17, she was in 20s
when she was filming this movie, maybe a case of miscasting but she does what
she needs to relatively well, she later moved to play Alice in Alice in
Wonderland, something clearly went wrong somewhere. Most of the rest of the
cast are decent enough, none of them get much screen time so it’s difficult to
assess them.
The action
is pretty solid, it takes a leap out of the Bourne series when it comes to hand
to hand combat but unlike Jason, Brian is much more willing to kill and does so
with significant violence. I’m going to be
watching the unrated cuts because that was what I got on the DVD
But let’s
talk about how contrived this movie. First of all, the mighty co-incidence that
off the young people going to Paris, probably some of many and the ones that
are kidnapped just happened to be the leads with a father who’s ex-CIA. But the
co-incidences don’t stop there, Kim just happened to have a direct view of her
running buddy being taken, just happened to have an abductor leave blood on the
mirror which just happens to lead Mills right to him, and a series of
co-incidences happens to lead to Brian to the exact person he heard on the
phone, which leads him to the an auction where his daughter just happens to be
the last candidate for sale. Yeah, if you think about the plot too much you’re
going to end up realising it’s not especially good.
But it is
carried through by great action and a great performance by Liam Neeson, and is
widely considered the best of this series. We’ll have to see about that as
Taken 2 and 3 are on the way.
Rating
69/100
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