Vanquish review – Ruby Rose slugs it out on a motorbike

Rose has the poise to carry this action movie about an alpha mama collecting money from narcotics nasties, but it’s cartoonish

With the superhero’s gentrification of the blockbuster business, there is little space any more for big-budget original action movies. So up-and-comers such as Ruby Rose – seen earlier this year opposite Jean Reno in The Doorman – are forced to slug it out in the B-movie arena, from where there’s no guarantee they’ll ever emerge into stardom. Rose looks great – her androgynous poise reminiscent of the young Angelina Jolie – and does a capable job carrying Vanquish. But you wonder if this noir-filtered, John Wick-apeing thriller is a little too stripped-back for its own good to advance her career.

Rose plays Victoria, carer to Damon (Morgan Freeman), a wheelchair-bound retired cop whose ridiculously upscale mansion hints at off-the-books income. But she has a secret past, too: as a top drug courier in Berlin for the Russian mafia. So when Damon decides to call in money from his narcotics contacts, he forces Victoria to make the five stops necessary – and takes her daughter hostage as insurance. The alpha mama takes to her superbike for a whistlestop underworld tour, strapped up with a helmet and chestcam letting her blackmailer eyeball her rendezvous.

Rose’s cartoonish assignations (some homeboys, a priest, a big-mouth mustachioed dealer in the mould of Alfred Molina in Boogie Nights), coupled with a scattering of plot morsels, give just enough narrative momentum to get Vanquish over the line. Director George Gallo is oddly relaxed about the finer details – such as how his heroine manages, held at gunpoint, to remove a hand grenade from her jacket, detonate it and escape unharmed – but he does have a talent for general ambience. Rose has an entrancingly tense entrance when she walks in on an African American gang as they watch an unlikely combination of curling and soft porn on giant screens.

But the in-camera gimmick, with Freeman literally phoning it in on Rose’s headset, lends a strangely passive, vicarious overlay to much of the action – which is not particularly well-marshalled. There is no John Wick-style long-take high-wire act here – it’s simpler just to make Rose so deadly she never misses a headshot. Speaking of careers, this listless fodder is not where you’d have predicted Gallo, writer of 80s masterpiece Midnight Run, to end up.

• Vanquish is available online on 28 May.

Contributor

Phil Hoad

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Doorman review – Ruby Rose turns model action hero
When a heist goes wrong, an ex-soldier must mop up the mess – while Jean Reno plays a menacing Frenchman

Leslie Felperin

12, Jan, 2021 @4:00 PM

Article image
Angel Has Fallen review – Gerard Butler's pyrotechnics fizzle out
In the latest overblown instalment of the Fallen franchise, Butler’s beleaguered secret service agent goes on the run, seeking out unintelligible dad Nick Nolte

Mike McCahill

21, Aug, 2019 @9:46 AM

Article image
Red - film review

Red has an all-star cast coming to the rescue of former agent Bruce Willis but leaves Philip French unimpressed

Philip French

23, Oct, 2010 @11:05 PM

Article image
Red - review
Bruce Willis's new film tries for the same ageing tough-guy schtick as The Expendables, but has a little more wit, writes Peter Bradshaw

Peter Bradshaw

21, Oct, 2010 @9:10 PM

Article image
Momentum review – Morgan Freeman on call for a terrible heist caper
Olga Kurylenko hasn’t much to do except hit people and Freeman was probably thinking of his bank balance

Mark Kermode, Observer film critic

22, Nov, 2015 @8:00 AM

Article image
Ben-Hur review – chariots of dire
This dull, clunking return to one of cinema’s great warhorses lacks all the subtlety, passion and grandeur of its more illustrious predecessors

Peter Bradshaw

08, Sep, 2016 @11:00 AM

Wanted

Peter Bradshaw: A macho action thriller that plays like a party political broadcast on behalf of the misogynist party

Peter Bradshaw

26, Jun, 2008 @11:15 PM

Article image
Heath Ledger mourned at The Dark Knight's London premiere

The cast wore black for the London premiere of The Dark Knight

Gwladys Fouché and agencies

22, Jul, 2008 @10:24 AM

Article image
Morgan Freeman thriller loses Momentum taking £4.60 per cinema
The South Africa-set action film, co-starring Olga Kurylenko, is set to be one of the year’s biggest flops after taking just £46 in the UK on its opening weekend

Benjamin Lee

24, Nov, 2015 @3:08 PM

Heath Ledger: Black carpet replaces red for Dark Knight's world premiere

The absence of the late Australian actor dominated the world premiere of Christopher Nolan's Batman sequel in New York last night

Gwladys Fouché and agencies

15, Jul, 2008 @4:49 PM