Haywire
Only Steven Soderbergh could produce a slick, modern, cineliterate deconstruction of the Hollywood action caper that also manages to be a rollicking good ride. With the high-style Haywire, Soderbergh takes the most hackneyed, secret-agent-double-crossed-by-her-paymasters storyline imaginable and directs the living hell out of it. In a move similar to his casting of pornstar Sasha Grey in 2009’s The Girlfriend Experience, he drafts in Gina Carano – AKA ex-American Gladiator, Crush – as svelte, skull-smashing special operative Mallory Kane.
What follows is a feminist tirade in the mould of Kill Bill as Mallory navigates the globe and coolly makes a string of potential assassins – Michael Fassbender, Channing Tatum and a ratty, side-parted Ewan McGregor – her unwitting punchbags. The combat scenes are ferocious, beautiful and refreshingly original, with the conventional frantic editing and ear-splitting techno stripped away to leave something closer to silent ballet (with pained grunting). David Holmes’s moodily effective Martini-time jazz soundtrack only kicks in when Mallory takes to tracking down her various shady aggressors. A horribly realistic hotel room fracas with Fassbender could even be deemed one of the all-time great fight scenes.
To prove that he’s taking all the pseudo-serious expositionary dialogue with a pinch of salt, Soderbergh infuses the material with various nods to Hitchcock classics like Notorious and North by Northwest, and the finale is a brutal comic inversion of the iconic beach canoodling scene in From Here to Eternity.
David Jenkins
From Time Out London
Dir Steven Soderbergh, category IIB, 93 mins, opens on Feb 2
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