The Gunman (2015)
TOMATOMETER
AUDIENCE SCORE
Critic Consensus: With an uninspired plot and rote set pieces that are overshadowed by its star's physique, The Gunman proves a muddled misfire in the rapidly aging Over-50 Action Hero genre.
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Movie Info
THE GUNMAN, the new action thriller from Pierre Morel, the director of Taken, stars Sean Penn, Javier Bardem, Idris Elba, Ray Winstone and Mark Rylance. (C) Open Road
Rating: | R (for strong violence, language and some sexuality) |
Genre: | Action & Adventure |
Directed By: | Pierre Morel |
Written By: | Don MacPherson, Jean-Patrick Manchette, Pete Travis, Peter Travis |
In Theaters: | Mar 20, 2015 Wide |
On DVD: | Jun 30, 2015 |
Runtime: |
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LoginCritic Reviews for The Gunman
All Critics (145) | Top Critics (38) | Fresh (24) | Rotten (121)
Rarely, though, have two Academy Award-winning actors been so stunningly off the mark in the same movie.

He's Sean Penn in all but name, and he's kind of a drag.

Sean Penn will have to wait for a better project if he wants to be the next Liam Neeson. [full review in Spanish]

Sean Penn is without question the greatest actor of his generation, but that doesn't necessarily mean he can carry an action movie.

Penn's mumbling and the occasional thick British accent sometimes make the proceedings a little hard to follow, but director Pierre Morel knows how to stage his shoot-'em-ups with a potent visceral charge.

The pathetic gender politics, so common in dick-flicks like these, seem particularly simplistic and yucky here. Penn never manages the tough-guy shtick and the plot overburdens him with dilemmas. Director Morel can't offer any lights-out action sequences.

Audience Reviews for The Gunman
A tough, mature and grown-up action movie, Director, Pierre Morel solidly hits his mark with a story with tons of suspense, character development, spectacular action and a awesome cast. An explosive and gritty action-packed edge of your seat thriller. It's an electrifying and pulse-pounding film. Sean Penn is riveting, he perfectly fits the mantle of action hero and is welcomed to the crowd of mature stars. It also have fantastic performances from Ray Winstone, Mark Rylance, Javier Bardem and Idris Elba.
Super Reviewer
A rather bland political thriller, The Gunman clumsily tries to mix action with political conspiracy. The story follows a former military contractor named Jim Terrier whose past comes back to haunt him when a group of mercenaries come looking for him. The action is pretty good, but the politics are extremely ham-fisted and aren't incorporated into the film very well. Featuring Sean Penn, Javier Bardem, and Ray Winstone, the cast is quite impressive and they give some strong performances. However, the script is weak and does give them much to work with. Still, there's a fair amount of mystery and suspense as Terrier tracks down those who are behind the attempts to kill him, and learns who he can and cannot trust. The Gunman isn't really a bad film, it's just poorly executed.
Super Reviewer
Gunning for a raspberry at an automatic clip, musclebound Sean Penn's attempt at becoming a Liam Neeson-style action hero unfortunately causes the audience to recoil with every pump of the trigger. Oh, the titular character certainly looks the part, cut like an UFC fighter and angrier than Christian Bale on the set of Terminator Salvation, but the deathly serious tone laughably handicaps what amounts to an expensive bullets and brawn B-Movie. Treating the same B-Grade material with an almost fanatical religious sternness, the story laughably misfires as well. Injected with a personal political bent by the producer, the already uninspired story becomes even duller when the lead a paycheck-cashing assassin retires to become a virtuous do-gooder, building wells and third world hearts before his past comes back to haunt himone of many such heavy-handed instances.
In this R-rated actioner, a former Special Forces soldier and military contractor (Penn) suffering from PTSD tries to reconnect with his long time love, but first must go on the run from London to Barcelona and across Europe in order to clear his name.
The producer, of course, also proves to be the star: Sean Penn, an actor known for sticking liberal foot in mouth on many an occasion. While the well-meaning actions of his character are far from an egregious affront away from the confines of the script, here they become self-important grandstanding. Worse, Penn (a very deserved Best Actor Oscar winner for Mystic River and Milk) inhabits the part with the same laser-intensity as with Dead Man Walking. This is the same actor who reportedly took swipes at Nicolas Cages thespian credentials when the latter starred in Con Air. At least Cage knows how to literally roll with the punches with tongue firmly in cheek. Perfect physical specimen Penn kicks and hits like the best of them but, in approaching The Gunman like it was an Ingmar Bergman masterpiece, his character quickly becomes more expendable than an Expendable.
Bottom line: I Am Sham
Super Reviewer
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