November Man - Movie Review

  • 06 November 2014

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Even though it never feels believable, this twisty spy thriller has such a quick pace that it's consistently entertaining. Packed with surprising revelations, the movie makes terrific use of shady American espionage agencies and villainous Russians, as well as a former James Bond. As with most of these kinds of films, it's also far too violent and edited in such a way as to make the action almost incomprehensible. But there's a sense of breezy fun to the film that keeps us watching.

It's been five years since CIA operative Peter (Pierce Brosnan) retired from active service, but his old friend Hanley (Bill Smitrovich) needs his help. So he heads to Moscow to intercept an operative with whom he has a past, and everything goes spectacularly wrong. He ends up in a face-off with his former protege David (Luke Bracey), a current CIA spy who is now ordered to eliminate his mentor. But there's life in Peter yet, and he manages to keep one step ahead of David, travelling to Belgrade to intercept a young woman, Alice (Olga Kurylenko), who is the key to a major operation that centres on a dodgy Russian politician (Lazar Ristovski). Chased by American spies and Russian thugs, Peter and Alice make a run for it.

Director Roger Donaldson has been making slick political thrillers since 1987's No Way Out, and he knows how to divert the audience's attention from plot holes and contrived action by simply never pausing for breath. He also packs the scenes with characters who bristle with snarky attitude, making them far more interesting than the usual action movie line-ups. Brosnan is clearly having a great time charging through each scene, nodding continually to his 007 history while playfully adding spark to his banter with Bracey, who just about keeps up with the "we know each other too well" interaction. And Kurylenko dives in with gusto, vamping it up gleefully as a woman with a lot of secrets.

While the thing everyone is after is rather dull (incriminating photos on an iPhone), everything is spiced up by the thematic undercurrents (political corruption and over-aggressive espionage) and the usual spy-thriller elements (car chases, shoot-outs, explosions). There are moments when all of this gels perfectly, and others in which everything seems to spiral badly out of control. But amid the chaotic editing and implausible set-pieces it helps to remember that this is just a silly action romp. And it's rather good at raising the pulse while leaving a smile on the face.

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Facts and Figures

Year: 2014

Genre: Thriller

In Theaters: Wednesday 27th August 2014

Production compaines: Relativity Media

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5

Cast & Crew

Director: Roger Donaldson

Producer: Sriram Das, Beau St. Clair

Screenwriter: Michael Finch, Karl Gajdusek

Starring: Pierce Brosnan as Devereaux, Luke Bracey as Mason, Olga Kurylenko as Alice, Bill Smitrovich as Hanley, Amila Terzimehic as Alexa, Lazar Ristovski as Arkady Federov, Mediha Musliovic as Natalia Ulanova, Eliza Taylor as Sarah, Caterina Scorsone as Celia, Akie Kotabe as Meyers, Will Patton as Perry Weinstein, Patrick Kennedy as Edgar Simpson, Dragan Marinković as Denisov, Ben Willens as Agent Jones, Miloš Timotijević as Fderov's Chief of Staff