COLOMBIANA - Not Even For Free: Even the Body Count Is Dull
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Colombiana fits comfortably within the EuropaCorp subgenre of trained-assassin-seeks-revenge (aka This Time It's Personal), but there's something off about it. The picture gets off to a good start, with 9 year old Cataleya (played by Amandia Stenberg; her character is named after an orchid that figures into the plot) enduring the sight of her parents killed before her eyes by evil Marco (Jordi Molla). She makes a fairly dazzling escape laced with parkour stuntwork, and calmly, singlemindedly, does whatever it takes to make her way to the US and her gangster uncle Emilio (Cliff Curtis). Then 15 years pass, and Cataleya grows up into the unexpectedly dull Zoe Saldana, who looks amazing--although so thin that one wants to see her eat a pizza or a Ring Ding--but hasn't the faintest whiff of a personality beyond the grim, dogged desire to avenge her family. (Deadpan humor, a quality Saldana seems to lack, is an underrated asset in this violent genre; one of the reasons people like Clint Eastwood, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis and Jason Statham--not to mention Angelina Jolie--have done so well over the years is that they carry a self-mocking air with them into battle.)
After that first burst of action, the movie doesn't liven up again until its last reel, when Cataleya finally finds the villains who killed her family. She has an exciting, Bourne-influenced fight with Marco at close quarters that gets the pulse racing for a bit, but even then the picture follows it by dispatching another foe with a lazy and contrived call-back to a gag from earlier in the movie, and then it still won't roll end credits until we have to suffer through another Vartan scene.
Colombiana was directed by Olivier Megaton (the name is a nom de film), who previously helmed Transporter 3 for Europa; although he handles the set-piece action sequences well enough, he doesn't race quickly enough through the storyline, unwisely allowing us to register its silliness and the flatness of the dialogue; aside from Curtis and Lennie James as a canny FBI agent, he doesn't get much from the actors, either.
We don't expect much from a movie like Colombiana, but a fast pace and a likable lead are indispensable. Colombiana doesn't have either of these, and despite the high body count, it's mostly a yawn. Without a doubt, though, Luc Besson and his EuropaCorp assembly line are already busily churning out next year's product to lure our ticket dollars.
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