New Jersey Stage Issue 73 | Page 104

grates its heroes’ long lives into its action scenes. You might imagine Andy and co. employing a range of weaponry and tactics gleaned through the ages, but that’s not the case here, and under Gina Prince-Bythewood’s TV-like direction, the action scenes (which are thin on the ground) are as generic as any other comic book movie, relying on the now de rigueur “double-tap” gun-fu style that grew tiresome across three John Wick movies. References to past dust-ups are dropped in dialogue (“Remember Sao Paulo in 34?”) but more flashbacks are required to truly give us a sense of what this lot have experienced. This is a movie - show us what they’ve endured, don’t simply tell us. Despite its faults, this year’s Vin Diesel vehicle Bloodshot was a more interesting take on a similar premise. For centuries-old warriors, Andy’s team are remarkably naive, perhaps the most incompetent heroes since Adam West and Burt Ward sucked in their bellies to don their unflattering Batman and Robin costumes. In the first half alone we witness Andy allow herself to be set up for an ambush, fall asleep so someone else can tie her up, and somehow miss the small army attacking her three subordinates while she has a pep talk with Nile only a few meters away. The villains aren’t any better. Fully aware of their combatants’ immortality, they keep trying to shoot them rather than blowing them to bits. Can Andy recover from being blown to smithereens? Would her body parts regroup like a liquid Terminator? The movie relies on your never asking such an inconvenient question. With a lack of summer blockbusters at the cinema this summer, Netflix will be hoping The Old Guard can quench the thirst of action fans. But if you’re expecting large scale action, look else- NJ STAGE - ISSUE 73 INDEX NEXT ARTICLE 104