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But they also provoke wonder that an actor who had once carved out a curiously sensitive masculinity on screen has somehow entered an action-spectacle rut that’s chipping away at his star appeal.
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Wahlberg’s monologues are so noise-polluting and self-consciously performed they’ll make you miss the days when action heroes were tight-mouthed mercenaries whose snarls, fists and derring-do did the talking for them. Lea Carpenter’s inanely speechifying screenplay includes Jimmy musing that “An op is a living thing” and “When they have what you need, they know they have the power” - the kind of “duh” moments that should only be answered by a cutaway to a functionary in the corner rolling his eyes. There really is someone doing an awful lot of shouting in the film, however, and it’s Wahlberg, whose eternally pissy special-forces commando character, Jimmy Silva, won’t shut up about global threats, workplace annoyances, colleague incompetence or - in useless flash-forwards in which Jimmy is getting debriefed/interrogated - the philosophical particulars of an op. Watch Video: Mark Wahlberg Plans to Reboot 'Captain Kangaroo'
#MILE 22 HD STREAM MOVIE#
The fictional “Mile 22” - another secret-ops saga about last-resort warriors, albeit with none of the escapist appeal of the “Mission: Impossible” movies - is the movie equivalent of being shouted at by your drunk ex-Army dad about how stupid and pointless your taste in popcorn fare is, and why can’t there be more bloody combat scenes with foreigners? Mixing obnoxious geopolitical cynicism, fashionable fight incoherence and - still? really? - the fading appeal of Mark Wahlberg in grim-hero mode, the movie feels like Berg in a state of retaliatory cinematic aggression after the lackluster showing of his recent real-life-bravery tales, “Deepwater Horizon” and “Patriots Day.” Primed to harsh any buzz you might still be enjoying from the exhilarating international spy high jinks of “Mission Impossible: Fallout,” Peter Berg’s “Mile 22” is an angry, hyperviolent downer of an action flick that is the August blowout-sale of its ilk: loud and desperate.