Filed under: Home Video News

DVD Review: Wanted (2-Disc Special Edition)

Crazy makes for a fun film, but not necessarily a good one

Wanted marries The Matrix’s visual roadmap with the self-loathing corporate worker-bee narration from Fight Club. It’s arguably the most expensive movie mash-up ever released. And while the filmmakers and some easily impressed fans tout the film as a work of innovation, it just simply isn’t. Other than the hilarious concept involving the characters taking their marching orders from a loom (The Loom of Fate!!! buhahaha), Wanted is a Xerox of a Xerox.

Yet, that doesn’t mean it isn’t as fun as a roll in the sack with your sexy ex-lover. Director Timur Bekmambetov turbo charges the tale of a young corporate drone recruited into a secret society of day-time weavers, night-time assassins with enough zippy action that you can’t help but enjoy the sucker.

It also helps that James McAvoy makes a believable everyman turned action God, despite screaming like Kate Capshaw for the majority of the film (I’m sure once this DVD goes public YouTube will be rife with videos editing these moments together). As usual, Morgan Freeman, Hollywood’s off-the-shelf product for when a film — no matter how shitty — needs an injection of dignity, brings… well, some dignity to the movie as the leader of the weaver-assassins. And I have no idea, beyond the obvious sex appeal, why anyone should care that Angelina Jolie shows up in the movie. Sure, the marketing is centered around her (or more specifically, her bulbous lips and tats), but all Jolie does is alternate between sexy smile and sneering glower and then occasionally mumbles a few lines of bland dialogue. Just when I hop on the Jolie bandwagon after her devastating performance in A Mighty Heart, she knocks me off with the typical superficial, soulless performance she’s infamous for among those of us not blindsided by her looks.

As for the DVD, the bonus features are pedestrian at best. It’s nothing more than a hodge-podge of perfunctory 6-10 minute featurettes on the stunts, special-effects, and visual-effects (although the disc does get brownie points for distinguishing between special and visual effects). There’s also a 20 minute doc on the movie’s cast and characters that’s essentially an extended infomercial for those who haven’t seen the film. The only interesting tidbits from the bonus features revolve around the film’s source material, Mark Millar’s comic book of the same name (the film is a very loose adaptation). And the main thing I gathered from a featurette on translating the comic to film and another feature that adds some motion and audio to a few of the comic book pages is that Millar’s comic was god awful. Sometimes loose adaptations are a very good thing (remember that Twilight fans).

However, considering Wanted’s derivative nature, this isn’t a movie I’m really interested in knowing all the behind-the-scenes details. But if you really need to know, then maybe it’s best to hold off — I’m sure a double-dip is inevitable. But if you only desire a big dumb flick to toss into your player on a boring Sunday afternoon, then it’s hard not to recommend Wanted.

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Post #1
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I expected more constructive criticism….I just don’t think you have a great grasp of that, every time you review a movie I never quite understand what is it that you want.

- PEO
( December 1st, 2008 | 1:08 am )
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Post #2
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The jolie backlash continues. Now they say - a devastating performance in a M. Heart. Now that this is past. Is this a review? ok. anyone can write reviews, I see.

- Paul
( December 1st, 2008 | 8:20 am )
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Post #3
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Wanted box office - worldwide - 340 million. That hurts.

- Paul
( December 1st, 2008 | 8:22 am )
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Post #4
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I loved this flick for what it was, an action entertainer. Waiting for the blu ray review.

- adu
( December 1st, 2008 | 10:18 am )
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Post #5
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You know those mean, bitchy kids in High School that always were the first to cut at someone and were never really part of a group because they couldn’t be trusted not to take you down for a laugh? The same one’s that don’t get the source material but can pull 500 words out of a hat to rip it apart? Apparently, some of them get to write movie reviews.

- nez
( December 1st, 2008 | 11:01 am )
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Post #6
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@Paul: Maybe it’s the borderline illiteracy of your comment (illiteracy, the one thing that doesn’t stop anyone from commenting on the Internet), but I’m unsure why you’re accusing me of taking a revisionist stance on Jolie’s performance in A Mighty Heart. When I saw the film shortly after its DVD release, I immediately thought she delivered the best female performance of the year. Which was was weird for me to admit (but not difficult when faced with the facts) since before that Jolie had never gave a performance that was better than adequate at best (yes her Oscar is completely undeserved)…which sort of means I was part of the backlash long before whatever backlash seems to be currently going on (which must be a very quiet backlash by the way).

As for breaking out Wanted’s worldwide gross to somehow bruise my ego on a film that I explicitly said I enjoyed and to legitimatize a sense of quality is so ridiculous that it does indeed hurt. Here’s a few other worldwide grosses

Hancock $624,386,746
Mamma Mia $566,631,891
Prince Caspian $419,646,109
Twilight $129,524,346 and growing
The Mummy 3 $392,078,839
Beverly Hills Chihuahua $111,885,266
Journey to the Center of the Earth $217,646,885

Linking a film’s box-office gross to its quality is as stupid as saying giving to charity prevents cancer. It doesn’t mean anything. And citing a box-office figure to make your case for a film’s artistic value only sends up a mile-wide burning red flag that you’re a complete fool.

- davidfrank
( December 1st, 2008 | 11:11 am )
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Post #7
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@nez: Actually, I only needed 5 words to rip Millar’s comic book apart.

- davidfrank
( December 1st, 2008 | 11:14 am )
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Post #8
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David thank you for pointing out just how bad Millar’s comic is. In fact Millar is highly highly overrated. That the filmakers were able to make an entertaining film is a testament to them.

- Damon
( December 1st, 2008 | 3:05 pm )
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Post #9
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Maybe it’s the borderline illiteracy of your comment (illiteracy, the one thing that doesn’t stop anyone from commenting on the Internet)

I was rigth. A prof. critic wouldnt say something like that.

- Paul
( December 1st, 2008 | 4:14 pm )
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