Bullet to the Head (2012) [Blu-ray]
Action | Crime | Thriller
Revenge never gets old Sylvester Stallone gives a powerful performances in this "lean and mean" (The Hollywood Reporter) white-knuckle thrill-ride. When the partner of aging New Orleans hit man Jimmy Bonomo (Stallone) is murdered, Bonomo vows to take down
those responsible. He teams up with a young D.C. cop (Sung Kang), and the unlikely partners are drawn into a tense, dangerous cat-and-mouse game with a ruthless "businessman" (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje).
Storyline: After watching their respective partners die, a New Orleans hitman and a Washington D.C. detective form an alliance in order to bring down their common enemy.
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Kenneth Brown on July 10, 2013 -- Revenge may never get old, but revenge actioners sure do. And Sylvester Stallone has all but made a gruff, bullet-riddled career of them. Director Walter Hill's
Bullet to the Head is another slice of big, dumb, revenge-driven fun for Stallone, minus enough Big, Dumb or Fun to make it as entertaining as guilty pleasures like The Expendables and its post-genre ilk. It isn't a bad film as bloody
escapism goes. Ignoring the rampant clichés, choppy early '90s editing and wooden character bits, the action is at least fittingly fierce and furious. But for a theatrical release, it feels decidedly direct-to-video; the sort grizzled old action stars
churn out by the half-dozen to keep gas in the tank and food in the fridge. Stallone isn't exactly hurting for cash these days, though, so what he's doing here is something of a mystery.
When New Orleans hitman Jimmy Bobo (Stallone) and his partner Louis Blanchard (Jon Seda, 12 Monkeys) are unceremoniously burned by their employer after offing a corrupt cop (Holt McCallany, Fight Club), Jimmy teams up with reluctant D.C.
detective Taylor Kwon (Sung Kang, Fast & Furious 6) to track down the man who killed Blanchard -- a heavy hitter named Keegan (Jason Momoa, Stargate Atlantis, Game of Thrones) -- and to figure out who set him up. It doesn't take long
either. The criminal masterminds are international fugitive Robert Morel (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Lost) and his American lawyer Marcus Baptiste (Christian Slater, True Romance), both of whom land themselves on Jimmy's hit list after making
the bone-headed decision to kidnap Bobo's daughter, tattoo artist Lisa Bonomo (Sarah Shahi, Life). Soon it's hitman vs. hitman (with a cop in the mix for a dose of moral fiber) as Jimmy takes his grudge match to Keegan and his cohorts.
Based on the French graphic novel "Du plomb dans la tête" by Alexis Nolent, Bullet to the Head is slow on the draw and clumsy on its feet, drunkenly stumbling from one thankfully sobering action scene to the next. It isn't even much of a revenge
thriller. It's a buddy flick in the vein of Hill's 48 Hrs., complete with copious one-liners and partner-on-partner racism... albeit without a cast capable of elevating any of the wince-inducing jokes screenwriter Alessandro Camon crams into his
script. More to the point, Stallone is the most agile actor on screen. Let me reiterate that in case you missed it: Stallone is the most agile actor on screen. And not in terms of physicality. His performance. And Bullet to the Head is no
Rocky. Kang is terrible. Flat, uncharismatic and unconvincing. Slater joins him, and might just be the single worst thing about the film. Akinnuoye-Agbaje gets lost in the mix. Shahi is quite good but tragically underutilized. And Momoa seems to be
starring in a different movie entirely, cheesier than even Bullet deserves. Together, the cast is as tiresome as the screenplay, although it's unclear which is ultimately to blame. (I vote Camon's script. But perhaps Hill should be on the ballot
too.)
If there's any consolation to be had it's the shootouts and fights, of which there are plenty. Seeing Stallone and Momoa go toe to toe with a pair of fire axes is as ridiculous as it sounds, but it's a violent, hilariously over-the-top blast, even with
Stallone still in the process of dusting off his assassin-with-a-heart-of-gold shtick. Fortunately, Morel and Baptiste have an endless supply of gunmen, nameless thugs and dirty cops on the payroll to give Jimmy (and select others, namely Keegan) a
veritable sea of bodies to wade through, and it's in the ocean of blood that's crossed that Bullet to the Head earns its namesake and cool-cat swagger. Yes, the realization that almost every action scene is a carbon copy of a better dust-up in a
better actioner is an annoying one, but there's just enough here to help catapult Hill's latest teamup from start to finish. Had Hill found someone as magnetic as Stallone to play Kwon (say... Thomas Jane, who was originally cast in the role), the movie
might have reached greater heights. As is, though, Bullet to the Head is watchable but likely to be quickly forgotten, if not disowned altogether.
Hill is rusty, Camon's script struggles, Stallone isn't given a lot to work with, and Bullet to the Head looks like it was much more fun to make than it is to watch. Even so, there's enough big, dumb fun here for a decent rainy Friday rental.
Just enough, but enough. Warner's Blu-ray release makes for a decent rental too, thanks to a solid video presentation and an explosive DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track. Its barely-there supplemental package is a letdown, though, and the film
is largely left to stand on its own. Whether or not that saves it from the bargain bin is entirely up to you.
[CSW] -2.8- Sylvester Stallone (as the good bad-guy) continues to deliver even at his age and Jason Momoa (as the bad bad-guy) is equally good in his role. The "mismatched cops" idea may be a cliché, but it is played well in this script, with some fairly
funny moments. Most interestingly, Stallone's relationship with the daughter shows his detached and amoral character. Rather than playing the protective father, he appears relatively detached from his daughter, and yet he also cares about her to some
extent. The ambiguity heightens his dark quality This is a hard hitting crime thriller with some nudity, some killing, well a lot of killing as you would expect from a movie named bullet to the head. If you are a fan of violent action thrillers this movie
is for you.
[V3.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box motion codes were available at the time of this rental although they are available now.
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