‘Ghosted Review: Chris Evans And Ana De Armas Team Up For A Romantic Action Comedy In Which The (Overbaked) Action Crushes The Romance
Action-romantic comedies have always been known for their willingness to please. It can be said that it is an unpopular genre. We laugh. Heart rate increases. And pass out in crazy chemistry. In great romantic comedies like Romancing the Stone, Out of Sight, True Lies or the new Murder Mystery sequel, the plot is the romance, the way the characters bond. (One of the ways that classic Hollywood satire spreads is that it's usually about couples who don't like each other so much that only a fatal line from their partnership can break the ice.) "It's being played, and it's like all fusion food experiments. Sorry, but the escapist equivalent of a quesadilla burger and fries is not my idea of entertainment.
It means "spirit". This movie was directed by the incredible Dexter Fletcher (Rocketman) from a screenplay by four writers (Rhett Reese, Chris McKenna, Eric Somers, Paul Wernick) that credits you with four more. An action-comedy romance that starts light and light-hearted, but quickly goes over the top before you know it.
We are talking about settings that are very difficult to connect. Jason Statham can be seen in the background of a scene in the film, but it is staged with much less precision. An arbitrary series of international agreements. The plot of the spy thriller is complex but short enough to be boring. And a romantic relationship between two stars that doesn't so much grow and develop as it metastasizes and crushes, although in theory you should look at their antics and think: This massive thriller is held together.
"Ghost" opens in Washington DC as a blind lunatic baller, starring Chris Evans, all sexy beards and manly smiles, and Ana de Armas, all hot, seductive brawlers on a date with a beauty. This is Cole, the farmer who runs the pot factory at the farmers market; The art curator is Sadie, who bought the wrong plant. But their argument turns to afternoon coffee, then Georgetown's Exorcist staircase and karaoke bar with live music, then a late-night stroll around town, and finally a sack race to seal the deal. . related characters; Actors are related. The only hint of conflict comes in the form of a joke about a cactus in a pot, which symbolizes two things: one side's (her) tendency to neglect what it should be growing (that's why the cactus is the ideal plant. His) and the other (that (that's why the cactus is an ideal plant for him), and the warmth of the other (she) has become very needy, which means that he can use some of that arousal. As long as it's fun!
The title seems to tell us that someone is going to be a ghost, but it's actually a reference to Cole's paranoia about being a ghost, which leads to him texting Sadie desperately the next day. (She doesn't think he texts her a lot because she doesn't count emojis.) Cole lives with his family on a beautiful farm outside of Washington, D.C., where his gentle parents (Tate Donovan and Amy Sedaris) are very supportive. . About her and not her naughty sister (Liz Broadway). But everyone agrees on one thing: relax. Don't act too necessary.
However, Cole couldn't help it. His character is to be a very old, very good man. So after Sadie doesn't answer her texts and finds the asthma inhaler she left in her purse (this is the first time our smart alert button has gone off, it won't be long) she finds herself going is in London, he makes an impulsive decision. He is going to surprise her by flying over the ocean. It's the climax of a 90s romantic comedy rather than the beginning of anything but a streaming kitchen sink movie.
Will Cole look like a detective? Of course he will. No sane person would do that. But the film requires him to be in London, only to suddenly find himself surrounded by three men who mistake him for... a tax inspector. It's the codename for a mysterious ghost spy that isn't. (That's why they used the Beatles tax guy.) So why did they think it was him? Why does an evil villain (Tim Blake Nelson) with a Cold War Dracula accent tie her to a chair and torture her with live bugs? In case you didn't know, the theme of Ghosted, or at least the way it works, is:
A good romantic comedy should build slowly but surely so that the audience feels invited to join in. In Ghost , on the other hand, Cole and Sadie waste no time in the Pakistani desert, where they drive a colorful local bus and sit behind a rock that looks like it could be a staple of Indiana Jones. XIV That Cole, the innocent villager, was already hanging on the side of the bus is less of a distraction than a major distraction built into the story like an action movie demigod. Sadie, if I forgot to mention, is a ruthless CIA officer who doesn't plan on having Cole follow her to London, but she wasn't upset at all about showing it. Even after becoming partners, they continued to fuel their animosity. , partly rooted in the spirit of "human mission". (He values the mission more than the lives of his teammates. Cole included.)
But for two lazy hours, we don't really care about the mission. Well, everyone's a McGuffin (or about three of them), from the Aztecs to the biomedical weapon Levesque (Adrien Brody), the villain from Saturn trying to get his hands on. However, the film hardly pretends to be any of those things. Evans, the Marvel hero, is fun enough to flirt with geeks, but he spends too much time playing Ghost, probably because he responds to so many phrases like, “You think you've met a crush? ". Need to respond. Not Mata Hari,” and de Armas, I fear, has turned away.
In the running joke, the famous actor appears as the murderer, who is killed two minutes later. At another point, Cole and Sadie keep saying, "You two should get a room." The joke is that they fight like cats and dogs. We understand that. they discover their sexual chemistry. The plane features an action scene from Jet's hit You're Gonna Be My Girl, sending the two of them to an island in the Arabian Sea. At this point, you might notice that the movie doesn't create their chemistry, it hinders it.
Ghosted is a sophisticated episode set in a glass skyscraper restaurant that may remind you of many of his best episodes. Spy conspiracies are commonplace. The action is bigger than any rom act com can handle. I'm not sure Dexter Fletcher has the ability to create elegant yet believable fight scenes. But on "Ghosted," he puts a lot of stuff into the mixer, and he should. The action in this movie doesn't bring the two characters too close until it ends up like the Novocaine action.
For more stories like this, follow us on MSN by clicking the button at the top of this page.Click here to read the full article.