If movies have taught me nothing—and let’s be fair, movies
have taught me most things—it’s that you never, never, ever mess with an
amnesiac. Every last one is a secret badass ready to take you apart by muscle memory
alone. And that’s certainly the case in Headshot. The set up
is strictly Bourne, but the Indonesian directing duo, the Mo
Brothers—Kimo Stamboel and Timo Tjahjanto, who also wrote the script—deliver bonkers
action on a level we don’t often encounter.
A young man (Iko Uwais, The Raid) washes
up on the beach with a head wound. A young doctor, Ailin (Chelsea Islan,
Street Society), nurses him back to health and names him Ishmael
because she’s reading Moby Dick. Ishmael’s past comes back
to haunt him in the form of Lee (Sunny Pang, The Collector),
a crime boss who lords over a crew of fanatical “children” who are more fiercely
devoted than your average goons.
It’s all very Dickensian, and Lee has more than a few
parallels to Fagin from Oliver Twist. And while the plot may
be familiar, the literary allusions add a level of grandeur and girth. Ishmael’s
relationship the other children—raised by their outlaw “Father of Hell”—has
more meat than your typical, “We were family!” betrayal yarn in most high-octane
face-punchy movies. Not a lot more, mind you, but a touch. It also adds an
extra layer of sibling-on-sibling barbarity to the fight scenes. Full of
unusual quirks and off-kilter choices and details, Headshot ably
distinguishes itself from the rest of the genre.
Most known for horror and thrillers like
Macabre and Killers,
Headshot marks the Mo Brothers’ first foray into action, and
they’re more than up to the task. With fights designed by Iko Uwais’ Uwais
Team, the superb action is obviously going to garner comparisons to
The Raid. From a mechanical standpoint, that’s an apt
comparison, but to stop there is to do Headshot a serious
disservice.
While some of the best movie martial artists and stunt
performers in the world—Iko Uwais, Julie Estelle (Hammer Girl in The Raid 2), Very Tri Yulisman (Baseball Bat Man in The Raid 2), Zack Lee (oddly enough, also The Raid 2),
David Hendrawan (The Night Comes for Us)—perpetrate the fight
choreography, the Mo Brothers up the ante even further.
Every scene is a hyper-stylized ballet of violence on par with
John Woo’s Hong Kong work. Innovative use of slow motion, unusual camera moves
and angles, elaborate depth of field, and focus tricks give
Headshot a singular dizzying visual aesthetic. Color
choices, the way smoke wafts through a frame, and a score that ranges from
dreamy and sinister to rhythmic and percussive, accentuate the eccentric, enigmatic
elements.
And don’t worry, the Mo Brothers also make excellent use of
their horror chops. Brutal, graphic violence and visceral, legitimately stomach-churning
savagery abound. We’re talking bone-breaking, face-stabbing, ear-shooting, horrific
brutality and gore—if you’ve ever wanted to see a dude with a machete sticking
out of his jaw... An angry movie, Headshot seethes with rage.
It throbs in both a metaphorical and literal sense—the frame pulses with a palpable
fury, reflecting Ishmael’s wrath. Raw and primal, there’s a poetic beauty in
the brutality.
While he’s proven time and again he’s one of the great
action purveyors in the world, Iko Uwais is admittedly not a top tier dramatic performer.
Early on, a few scenes feel repetitive—we get it, Ishmael lost his memory, he’s
bonded with Ailin—and after opening on a bananas prison break, Headshot
takes a while to really get rolling. But when it does, all you can do is hang
on with a white-knuckle death grip. There’s just enough backstory to create
emotional investment, but not so much that it derails the pace or tempo. And by
the time Ishmael kicks into high gear, the story gets swept to the side—turned
to when necessary, but with so much pummeling and chaos, that’s a rare
occasion.
Between Headshot and John Wick: Chapter 2, we’ve already had two badass masterpieces this year. (And
Ben Wheatley’s Free Fire is yet to come.) On-screen action
is rarely this visceral, mesmerizing, or vicious. With a cadre of incredible
martial arts talent, the Mo Brothers put their stamp on a new realm and
Headshot will be spoken of with reverence by genre purists
for years to come. (And thank the heavens, Timo Tjahjanto and most of the core
cast—Iko Uwais, Julie Estelle, Zack Lee, Sunny Pang, and even Joe Taslim from
The Raid and Fast & Furious 6—are
already working on another action joint.) [Grade: A]
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