Saturday, 04 May 2024

Intense, action-packed 'International' thriller delivers

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Clive Owen stars in the action-packed thriller, "The International." Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures.

 

 


THE INTERNATIONAL (Rated R)


Very topical in its focus on shenanigans in the international banking community, “The International” is an intense, gripping thriller that captures the audience’s attention mainly for its exciting action, while secondarily touching upon the general angst over the current sad state of global economic affairs.


Even though the bad guys are a bunch of slick, evil bankers worth rooting against, the film is less concerned with making any societal or political points than delivering a reckless, impetuous high-stakes chase across the globe in pursuit of relentless thrills. Despite its bland, nondescript title, “The International” is anything but dull.


As the film opens, Interpol agent Louis Salinger (Clive Owen), formerly of Scotland Yard, is observing a colleague’s rendezvous with a bank insider in Berlin, just before things go horribly wrong. The fellow agent is victimized by foul play, while the insider is later discovered to have died in a mysterious auto accident.


The scruffy Salinger, looking like he needs a stiff drink and three days' rest, is hot on the trail of duplicitous happenings within an international banking concern going by the initials IBBC. It’s not a coincidence that the IBBC can be mistaken for BCCI, which one may recall was the largest corporate scandal of the early 1990s.


The real-life BCCI scandal involved an operation that engaged in pervasive money laundering, with a brisk sideline business in arms trafficking, mercenary armies, intelligence activities and support for terrorist organizations. BCCI was a full service bank that included murder and mayhem in addition to simple bank deposits.


Whereas BCCI was founded in Pakistan, the fictional IBBC operates from sleek headquarters in Luxembourg. Other than the geographical differences, IBBC is indistinguishable from BCCI, since the Euro swells running the banking empire are a bunch of scumbags.


Salinger is hell-bent on taking down these bad guys, particularly Jonas Skarssen (Ulrich Thomsen), the head of the IBBC conglomerate, and Wilhelm Wexler (Armin Mueller-Stahl), the old school confidant who was a former Stasi agent in East Germany.


Though typically a loner, Salinger is joined on his quest by Eleanor Whitman (Naomi Watts), a Manhattan assistant district attorney who is equally driven to bring down the criminal enterprise.


Their first mission together involves a trip to Milan, where an assassination plot is carried out against a prominent figure, which goes to show how deep the tentacles of the IBBC are able to reach. This is a bank that has its own hired gun, in this case a shadowy presence known only as the Consultant (Brian F. O’Byrne), a physically unremarkable loner who remains inconspicuous but extremely deadly.


The fast pace of the action takes Salinger and Whitman on a whirlwind tour of the world, with probably the most intense action set-piece in recent memory taking place in New York City’s iconic Guggenheim Museum.


Bullets collide with the art world when Salinger follows the mysterious assassin Consultant to the famous art museum, and teams of gunslingers show up to take out both the Interpol agent and the assassin, thereby neatly disposing of the IBBC’s potential headaches.


The ambush turns the museum into a shooting gallery, artfully staged because the Guggenheim is a circular building with one long continuous ramp, lending itself to the crossfire of the most explosive gun battle likely ever filmed within a confined space.


Directed by Tom Tykwer (“Run, Lola, Run”), “The International” seems inspired by vintage Cold War spy stories, a mix of James Bond adventurism and the modern sensibility of Jason Bourne’s penchant for intense chases.


The latter inspiration is on full view with a trip to Istanbul, where Salinger shadows IBBC honcho Skarssen’s shady dealings with arms dealers and assorted pond scum. Similar to the most recent “Bourne” film, there’s a nice chase scene on the roof tops in the Turkish capital, where Salinger has an ultimate showdown with his nemesis, though there’s a nifty surprise twist.


One of the fun things about “The International” is its keen ability to tap into our deepest suspicions about the whole panoply of villains. Indeed, the European bankers, appropriately oily and nattily attired, are deliciously sinister, morally bankrupt and just plain evil. The bank’s clients are a cornucopia of easily identified trash, including African warlords, Chinese arms merchants, Middle East terrorists, and venal, corrupt power brokers. We can’t help but have a rooting interest in the soulful Salinger’s quest to take them all down.


Intrigue, violence and revenge combine for one fantastic thriller. “The International” rates very highly, along with “Taken,” for the recent crop of exciting action pictures.


DVD RELEASE UPDATE


Loosely based on British writer Toby Young’s autobiographical account of writing for a prominent American magazine, “How to Lose Friends and Alienate People” tells the story of the outrageous rollercoaster of a career path Young carved out for himself.


Simon Pegg, the zany British actor in “Shaun of the Dead,” plays the main character of Sidney Young, a disillusioned intellectual who both adores and despises the world of celebrity, fame and glamor. Hired by an upscale magazine after catching the attention of Jeff Bridges (playing the editor), Young leaves his job at a British magazine.


The editor warns Young that he must impress the pants off those around him in order to be successful, but instead the British iconoclast constantly annoys everyone until a rising starlet (Megan Fox) develops affection for him and might be the only thing that could save his disastrous career.


“How to Lose Friends” is at its best when sticking to comedy, but is not so great when pushing romance. The DVD extras are just routine interviews and commentary.


Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

 

 

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Clive Owen and Naomi Watts team up to fight the bad guys of the IBBC in "The International." Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures.
 

 

 


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