Review: The Raid 2
After the events
of the first film, cop Rama (Iko Uwais) is tackling the big-time gangsters in
this outing. Working with IA, Rama is assigned the task of serving a contrived
prison sentence to get close to Uco (Arifin Putra, smooth but volatile), hoping
to get a gig as hired muscle for Uco’s powerful kingpin father Bangun (Tio
Pakusadewo). The idea is to ferret out the bad eggs in the police department in
cahoots with the crims. Thrown into the mix are a rival gangster named Bejo
(Alex Abbad, as quirky as his rival is stoic), and a Japanese mob. Yayan Ruhian
turns up as an expert killer who longs to patch things up with his estranged
kids. In between hacking limbs and kicking arse, that is.
I guess you can’t
blame Welsh writer/director/editor Gareth Edwards too much for getting overly ambitious in this sequel to the
top-notch martial arts/action-thriller “The Raid”. For this 2014 film,
he’s basically inspired by more epic-scale cops-and-crims pics, particularly
from Hong Kong, as well as a touch of Francis Ford Coppola. Unfortunately, the
problem is “The Raid” worked because of its no-frills, hard and fast,
violent nature. It was a blast and a half. This sequel is slow, drawn-out, and
far too unwieldy. At times, it’s frankly rather boring. A film like this really
ought not go for close to 2 ½ hours, especially when you’re mostly working with
martial arts guys, rather than top-drawer actors and a script that’s as old as
the hills. This was a massive disappointment to me, albeit punctuated by
moments of undeniable pure awesomeness.
Sure, nothing
tops the first film’s awesome three-way ‘boss fight’ (the best of its type of
all-time, in my view), but when this film is good…oh boy. The prison fight is
completely ricockulous, but because the film had been drowning in talk up to
that point, I couldn’t help but enjoy the respite. Even better is a later fight
in the prison yard (and in the mud, I might add), which is fucking epic stuff
in the best sense. The film is almost worth seeing just for this set piece
alone. Meanwhile, Edwards kinda shot himself in the foot last time by killing
off actor/fight choreographer/bad arse Yayan Ruhian. So what’s the solution?
Bring him back inexplicably, in a completely different role. And he’s in fine
form. This guy is such a bad arse that he carries a machete whilst taking down
a bunch of thugs…and waits until the last guy before he bothers using it,
relying on his fists and feet the rest of the time. He also doesn’t bother
running when said last guy starts to run away. He’s such a bad arse that he
knows he doesn’t need to run, just briskly walking after him. Bad. Arse. His
character is a fascinatingly layered one, too. A sad man doing bad things for
even worse people, you can never quite sympathise with nor entirely hate him.
There’s clearly a lifetime of sorrow and regret in his performance…and then he
just goes and beats the fuck out of about 10-15 guys in the film’s second-best
action set piece. Goddamn, that Mr. Ruhian. He’s my new hero. Unfortunately,
just as you’re really starting to enjoy this scene-stealing turn, well…let’s
just say that his character is a minor cog in the wheel that is this film’s
plot. In fact, his character’s role in the film’s overall plot ends up seeming
rather pointless. Thoroughly enjoyable for sure, but still pointless.
Somewhat making
up for Mr. Ruhian’s absence is a fantastic cross-cutting between a guy beating
brains in with a baseball bat (and sometimes even using the ball), a chick
mowing people down on a train with two freaking hammers, and another group
targeting a guy in a grassy field. It’s a bravura set piece, with the sound of
the baseball bat hitting flesh unforgettable. The 2 on 1 between Uwais, the
baseball guy, and the hammer chick in a confined space is pretty terrific too.
So there’s definitely some great stuff in this for action fans. There’s also a
really terrific performance (by far the best in the film) by Brandon
Lee-lookalike Arifin Putra, who also speaks pretty perfect English. Make this
guy an international star already! I was actually surprised to find that he’s a
German-born Indonesian (with a German father), because he doesn’t look remotely
like any of the other Indonesians in the cast. Lead actor Iko Uwais is coming
along nicely as a thespian, he’s clearly got something, but he can’t save a film
on his own. His character this time out just isn’t interesting enough to carry
a film of this length, especially given the story is so unwieldy that his
character seems to get lost in the shuffle for periods of time. He’s the main
character!
The camerawork by
Matt Flannery and Dimas Imam Subhono is better this time out, not nearly as
shaky. In fact, some of it is truly inventive, making things look even more
brutal and impactful. However, whoever was responsible for filming the fight in
the car should be raked across the coals (Edwards apparently did the action
choreography, with stars Uwais and Ruhian doing the fight choreography). It’s
lame, but only because the overhead camerawork reveals the artificiality of it
all. The car has no roof, or else the shot would be impossible. Besides, Jon
Foo already did it better in “Bangkok Revenge”. The resulting freeway
chase screams of a director doing something simply because he has the money and
freedom to, whether it’s worthwhile or not. The long, gory fight in a kitchen
would’ve been even more fun if not (yet again) for the obviously fake set-up of
a kitchen far too spacious to be realistic. No commercial kitchen would be that
roomy, even when empty. Still, that sure is a lot of blood being spilt. Wow.
Even with the
rather hackneyed plot (which cribs quite a bit from “Eastern Promises” and
“Only God Forgives”, the latter of which also seems to have inspired
some of the set design) there’s probably a really good 85-90 minute movie in
here somewhere. Unfortunately, someone thought they were the second coming of
Sergio Leone meets Wong Kar-Wai and has tried to make a big crime epic. It
doesn’t work, but there are masterful moments of action here and there, and
look out for Arifin Putra in the future. That guy’s got something.
Rating: C+
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