Güncelleme Tarihi:
A great deal of the allure in "Taken" comes from the wild juxtaposition of its premise: The idea of Liam Neeson - esteemed, acclaimed, 56-year-old Liam Neeson - kicking all kinds of butt in a European B-movie revenge thriller.
Yes, Pierre Morel's film moves with breathlessly incessant fluidity and speed; that's a given from the director of the French action flick "District B13," working from a script co-written by Luc Besson, for whom this sort of trashy adventure is his baguette and butter. But cast someone you've never heard of in the lead role - someone who didn't receive an Oscar nomination for playing Oskar Schindler, for example - and it might not have worked nearly so well.
Neeson seems to be having a blast, too, unleashing chaos as former CIA operative Bryan Mills. Bryan's been trying to live a quiet life in Los Angeles, where he's moved to be closer to his 17-year-old daughter, Kim (Maggie Grace), whom he neglected for years while he was out tracking baddies around the globe. (Grace, the 25-year-old former "Lost" star, seems lost herself playing a teenager; she does it with the weirdly innocent goofiness of a girl half that age.)
Kim and her mom,
Unexpectedly fun
When Kim and her girlfriend get kidnapped,
For example, since he happened to be on the phone with Kim when she was abducted, he's able to piece together not only where she is, but the ethnicity of the people who snatched her. His use of a walkie-talkie and a cell phone in an elaborate rooftop bait-and-switch is also amusing. But mainly he has sheer brute force on his side - along with some cheesy, menacing dialogue.
"Jean-Claude, I will tear down the
It's a whole lot of nonsense and bluster that will, of course, end well - but not before a Saudi sheik's yacht is shot to bits and an untold number of bloodied bodies lay strewn all over the City of