Saturday, January 21, 2012

MOVIE REVIEW: Gina Carano kicks serious butt in "Haywire"

 




















Carano's Mallory is running — and kicking and punching — for her life in director Steven Soderbergh's thriller.

Director Steven Soderbergh's "Haywire," starring the marvelous mixed martial arts mastery of Gina Carano, makes one thing perfectly clear: Bad things happen in Barcelona. And if you're in the assassination and espionage game, which Carano's Mallory Kane is, you just might find yourself on the wrong end of a gun. Or, in Mallory's case, relentless kicks and flying fists.

Less a tightly plotted action film than an excuse to showcase Carano's substantial fighting skills, "Haywire" doesn't measure up to the best of the director's work — like, say, his Oscar-winning drug drama, "Traffic." But watching Carano kick, spin, flip, choke, crack and crush the fiercest of foes — mostly men about twice her size — is thoroughly entertaining, highly amusing and frankly somewhat awe-inspiring. Fortunately she doesn't bruise easily.

The plot is indeed anchored to what went down in Barcelona. The narrative uses a "Usual Suspects" approach, teasing the ending at the beginning, then piecing the past together scene by scene.

Sometimes the story unfolds in a set piece — like the all-important Barcelona gig that involved a high-stakes rescue and a romantic interlude, or the trip to Dublin that brings Michael Fassbender into the picture as Paul, Mallory's partner for a night of cocktails and killing. Other times it unfolds as she lays it out to the kid (Michael Angarano) whose car and whose company she's hijacked while trying to elude the bad guys.

Mallory tells him that his job will be to explain what really happened. Maybe we could get his number.

The film also stars Channing Tatum, who, like Fassbender, is killer eye candy — as in lethal and good looking. His Aaron is the down-home charmer to Paul's tuxedoed Bond type. Kenneth, a tightly shorn and slightly sleazy Ewan McGregor, is the puppet-master pulling the strings at the contract-killing company where Mallory is suddenly on the outs.

The major clients are Rodrigo (Antonio Banderas) and the government's Coblenz (Michael Douglas), also eye candy but of the aging gracefully sort; their loyalties more ambiguous. Motives are many but muddy — the important thing to remember is that Mallory must be eliminated. That single fact drives everything.

Screenwriter Lem Dobbs has done better (the sci-fi mystery "Dark City") and worse (the Hollywood ride-along "The Hard Way"), with "Haywire" somewhere in the middle — a few intriguing threads amid a bundle of loose ends. It's his most recent collaboration with Soderbergh, echoing some of the get-the-bad-guy-at-all-costs themes of their better work, "Kafka" and "The Limey," which basically bookended the '90s. But it's not in the same league as the director's more accomplished films: last year's "Contagion," for example.

The humor, however, is classic Soderbergh — dry, bone dry, 0% humidity dry. Mallory's plight is close to parody as the director plays with the espionage genre this time out (I can't wait till he gets around to horror). Unfortunately, "Haywire" never quite gels into anything tense, and this is theoretically a thriller.

More in the vein of "Mr. & Mrs. Smith," but not as sexy or as clever, it might have benefited from a little of the cerebral chill that so nicely infected "Contagion" and a dash more of the smart sardonic side the filmmaker brought to "The Informant!" or the best of his "Ocean's Eleven" series.

The deficits are somewhat offset by the filmmaker's sheer technical wizardry. Even Soderbergh's worst work (and "Haywire" isn't that) cleans up nicely with such serious attention paid to lighting, framing, casting, costumes, colors, sets; and, per usual, with the director handling the cinematography too under the name Peter Andrews.

There is a sense within all the haywire high jinks that Carano might be able to do just fine with a role that didn't rest so heavily on fighting (though stunt coordinator R.A. Rondell proved a genius in choreographing all those tumbling rumbles). Her athleticism gives her movement a kind of force that translates powerfully on screen — people do seem inclined to get out of her way even when she's not angry.

There are glimpses as well of an active interior life behind that flirty smile. But a fighting Mallory was her mission in "Haywire," and in that it's hard to imagine that anyone could beat her.

 

Gina Carano's Haywire trailer




As the Relativity panel finished up at Comic-Con Friday afternoon, the company released its first trailer for Haywire, the Steven Soderbergh-directed action movie starring Gina Carano.
The mixed martial arts-laden thriller features the standard revenge plot about an ass-kicking assassin who is double-crossed and comes after her betrayers. It also looks distinctly like Luc Besson's forthcoming Colombiana, which also features a female assassin in the form of Zoe Saldana.
Haywire is written by Lem Dobbs, who also scripted Soderbergh's The Limey, which itself is a twist on the one-man revenge thriller. That was very slick and tight, anchored by the performance of Terence Stamp. We'll see if Soderbergh and Carano have made this one as interesting when it comes out in January.



 
Steven Soderbergh saw something in Gina Carano and immediately created a movie around her. That film is Haywire and it lands in theaters January 20. Carano is a gifted Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) fighter who rarely loses. Unfortunately, she lost her last fight, but it proved fateful because it meant she was free to take that call from Soderbergh. Carano sat down with Movie Fanatic to dish appearing in Haywire, how the film came about and her thoughts on how Hollywood action movies rate when they portray fighting. She also surprises us by letting us know what some of her favorite films are... Pride and Prejudice? You bet!
Haywire Star Gina Carano Pic
Haywire follows Carano's character, a highly trained spy, who is betrayed by those who employ her (the cast includes Ewan McGregor, Antonio Banderas, Michael Douglas, Michael Fassbender and Channing Tatum... who is the backstabber?!). Carano's character crosses the globe in order to find the truth and make right what is so wrong and in the process announces to the world that we have a new action hero in Hollywood.

Movie Fanatic: Were you familiar with Steven's work and how did the part in Haywire come about?

Gina Carano: I didn't know who he was [laughs]. I don't know much about Hollywood really. I'm still learning. I knew he did Traffic and that was a movie that really touched me. So I decided to pick him up at the train station in San Diego. We had a four hour lunch and at the end of it he offered me a movie. There was no auditioning. I don't know what that is like yet.

Movie Fanatic: Was training for this role as a spy who gets double-crossed any different than training for a bout?

Gina Carano: It was very different [laughs]. They had me getting up at 5 a.m. Then I did three hours of stunts and three hours of Mossad secret service training with guns -- pretty much boot camp and getting yelled at and getting stomped and stomping other people. After that I did strength and conditioning. There wasn't any acting training until probably the week before. I had the script with me and I had so much anxiety about it. I was like, "I don't know what to do with this damn thing." Finally a week before, they were like, "Let's try reading some lines with an acting coach."

Movie Fanatic: Did you have any action heroines that you looked up to like Sigourney Weaver in Aliens or Linda Hamilton in the Terminator movies?

Gina Carano: They are good at acting. I respect that about these women. Everybody has been trying to compare me to them. But I don't want that comparison. They are gorgeous. They can do anything they want, but they still do these kinds of roles. I think that's a beautiful thing. What I'm bringing to it is whatever I can to fight with my own flavor and my own personality.

Movie Fanatic: What films are your favorite from when you were growing up?

Gina Carano: I didn't really watch action films. It's funny. I grew up on Anne of Green Gables and the earlier Pride and Prejudice with Colin Firth. Then I dated somebody who was a big fan of Bruce Lee. I don't really have somebody I was looking at to mimic and I didn't have somebody I was looking to mimic in fighting either.

Movie Fanatic: This film was the next thing you did after your last fight. Will you get in the ring again?

Gina Carano: I think I'll get on the other side of this and land and figure that out. I haven't ruled it out to be honest.

Movie Fanatic: What's next for Gina Carano... perhaps Wonder Woman? I could totally see you as her. Take note, Hollywood!

Gina Carano: To be very honest, I think a lot of people have been waiting for this to come out and to see how it does and my performance. It's not the easiest role to break into but we have ideas and we have scripts and we have people that do want to work but it's not the easiest thing to get a film made. And as far as Haywire 2, that's all up to Soderbergh and I think everyone's just waiting for this film to come out. Regardless, I'm really excited to get on the other side of it and just land somewhere.
Gina Carano and Michael Fassbender in Haywire
Movie Fanatic: We spoke to Michael Fassbender for A Dangerous Method and he told us that you put him in a nasty headlock that made him pass out. But, he seemed really game for the action. How was working with him?

Gina Carano: I'll tell you this: he had no problem slamming me into anything [laughs]. Soderbergh told him once, "We need to get this shot better when you slam her head into the wall." I was like, "Damn, this thing is not soft." But Soderbergh was behind the camera and he was being real mischievous, like he wanted something bad to happen. I slammed a vase in his face. I was supposed to throw the vase past him just for that take because we wanted to get my head slammed against the wall. We were going for it and he slammed my head so hard against the wall that I lost it for a second. I slammed the vase right into Fassbender's face, but he said he could see it coming because he saw a flash in my eyes. Right after that I thought, "Oh, I'm going to lose my job."

Recommended Web Posts


Gina Carano Nude on ESPN The Magazine
Gina Carano Nude on ESPN The Magazine: America’s obsession with Gina Carano and her stunning looks led to her being nicknamed “Crush” on American Gladiators, as people just can’t seem to get enough of this 27-year-old brunette beauty from Las Vegas, Nevada (born in Dallas, Texas). Despite being handed the first loss in her mixed martial arts career (7-1), Gina isn’t going anywhere, as she remains deeply rooted in the hearts of American fans and followers abroad.
Gina Carano Nude on ESPN The MagazineSo much, that not only has ESPN taken notice, but they’ve also convinced the usually conservative beauty to pose topless in their latest edition of ESPN The Magazine and thus, Carano adorns the cover.
Are you an MMA fan that watches The Ultimate Fighter 10 as well as other MMA and non-UFC events? Well check this out, some of the best Online MMA Oddsmakers at BetUS.com have posted the best sports betting odds for all upcoming events that include: TUF 10, UFC 104, UFC 105, UFC 106, Strikeforce’s Fedor vs. Rogers and much more… Visit them today and experience your MMA experience like never before by betting on your favorite athletes from the comfort of your own computer!

Carano is just one of the many athletes that have decided to take it all off for ESPN The Magazine. However, she’s by far the most attractive one if you ask me! Some of the others include: Serena Williams, the ageless Randy Couture, Dwight Howard of the Orlando Magic and others.

Gina Carano sex tape 'just a joke' from Kit Cope

MixedMartialArts.com
Quoteworthy:
"Come on kiddies! Listen to the whole interview. The sex tape thing was OBVIOUSLY a joke response to a listener's question. I said that a bunch of times. I also didn't say she should train with me, but Master Chan, her old Muay Thai coach. And I never called out any of the Xtreme Fashion guys. I actually said they were all gnarly fighters. Lastly, I said Tompkins was proficient at get someone in shape and simply lacks technical Muay Thai skills. Good twisting though."
Kit Cope, who is perhaps best known for MTV's "True Life: I'm a Muay Thai Fighter," attempts to clarify recent remarks made in radio interview, during which he hinted that a sex tape existed with ex-girlfriend Gina Carano. The one-fight UFC veteran backtracks on the provocative claim, saying it was all just in good fun. Cope and Carano broke up about two years ago -- well before Carano became the pretty face of female mixed martial arts. She's about to put that pretty face on the line and battle Chute Boxe wrecking machine Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos for the first-ever Strikeforce female world title on Aug. 15. Carano is more than likely not amused with Cope's "joke," which set the message boards on the Interwebs ablaze for the past few days, just three weeks before the biggest fight of her career. Distraction?















Nude to Make the Weight
There is a lot of buzz on the web about MMA’s Gina Carano. There was a fight tonight. It was Gina Carano vs. Kelly Kobold. And she had to get nude three times to make the 141 weight limit.
MMA Gina Carano nude towel
She weighed in at 142.75 pounds on her first attempt. After removing all of her clothes, a towel-covered Carano weighed in a second time at 142.5 pounds. On her third attempt Carano weighed 141 pounds. Of course men are salivating all over the web about this story. There are even videos and .gifs of someone dropping one of the towels. Tell me that wasn’t on purpose!
PS – If she looks familiar to you it’s cause Carano also appears as the Gladiator “Crush” on American Gladiators.










 

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