Max Payne (2008)

Max Payne
Michael Gibson/20th Century Fox
Release Date : October 17, 2008

A Lone Avenger, Jampacked With Righteous Anger

I think it was when bursts of flame filled the Manhattan night and giant winged creatures smacked against skyscraper windows like bugs on windshields that I began to lose the narrative thread of “Max Payne,” a somber, stylized new action movie derived from a video game.

Up until then it seemed more or less clear. Some people had wings tattooed on their arms, and they all seemed to be hooked on a blue liquid developed by a pharmaceutical company where the hero’s wife worked before she was murdered, along with their child, by some people with wings tattooed on their arms. The weather in New York alternated between fluttering snow and driving rain, and every time someone fired a gun the images slowed down and the sound mix cleared out so you could hear the plink of a bullet casing as it hit the ground. Meanwhile, Max Payne (Mark Wahlberg) is an action hero so melancholy that he can’t even muster a quotable catchphrase.

Which gives “Max Payne,” directed by John Moore from a script by Beau Thorne, a measure of integrity. It’s not an especially good movie, but such a judgment is not really relevant to its ambitions. It is content to be an efficient vehicle for the delivery of a familiar range of sensations, some of which almost rise to the level of feelings. Though a sexy woman in a skimpy dress (next-wave Bond Girl Olga Kurylenko) shows up to tempt Max, lust is not really on the menu. Instead, the film’s momentum is derived from the grim, ruthless self-pity of the lone avenger.

Max Payne, a solo shooter moving through hallways, alleys and empty rooms, is a figure handed down from movies to video games and nowadays, increasingly, handed back. Mr. Moore does a fairly good job of adapting the cinematic aspects of first-person shooter games back into cinema, and in devising a coherent color scheme and sound design for Max’s escapades.

A coherent story would be a lot to ask, and would in any case slow down the movie’s rhythm. Max’s righteous anger finds various allies and targets, though it is not always clear who is which. They are played by Mila Kunis, Beau Bridges and Ludacris with just enough panache and expressiveness to uphold the (increasingly irrelevant) distinction between a movie and a video game.

“Max Payne” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). The brutal violence has been cleansed of blood, the swearing avoids the really bad words and when Ms. Kurylenko is topless she is filmed from the back.

More Information :

Directed by John Moore; written by Beau Thorne; director of photography, Jonathan Sela; edited by Dan Zimmerman; music by Marco Beltrami and Buck Sanders; production designer, Daniel T. Dorrance; produced by Mr. Moore, Julie Yorn and Scott Faye; released by 20th Century Fox. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.

WITH: Mark Wahlberg (Max Payne), Mila Kunis (Mona Sax), Beau Bridges (B. B. Hensley), Ludacris (Jim Bravura), Olga Kurylenko (Natasha), Amaury Nolasco (Jack Lupino) and Chris O’Donnell (Jason Colvin).

Note:

This is the movie which I watched recently,, I wanted to watch Eagle Eye, but unlucky there's just Laskar Pelangi (Indonesian Movie) and Max Payne at Djakarta Theater. So my friends and I agreed to watch this movie.
Personally I think this movie is bad. I don't really like it, and so did my friends. That's bad. But, still could be enjoyable to watch..

-auReL-

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