Lockout Average Rating: 2.5/5
(Based on six web
reviews)
Stars: 2.5/5 Site: nytimes.com
Real
cinematic killer B’s may be extinct, but at the French film factory EuropaCorp
the B-movie ethos of cheap genre thrills endures. A co-creation of the hit
maker Luc Besson, EuropaCorp is the outfit that
fired the bullet-headed Jason Statham into international fame with the “Transporter” franchise
and resurrected Liam Neeson as a middle-aged tough guy with “Taken.” One of the
company’s latest, the English-language “Lockout,”
is as dopey an entertainment as imaginable, but it’s also a reminder that the
film’s star, Guy Pearce, has always had great screen magnetism, to which he
has now added a bedrock of muscle. Also: he can act.
Read full
review here
Stars: 6/10 Site: flix66.com
Despite some
flaws, LOCKOUT is still high-octane fun full of fast energy and absurd
action. It’s not near as good as THE FIFTH ELEMENT but still better than COWBOYS & ALIENS and Pearce delivers the appropriate humor
and grit to make it worthwhile. Clearly LOCKOUT isn’t for everyone but if you
enjoy entertaining Sci-fi films with B-movie mentality, I highly recommend this
crazy futuristic outer space prison film.
Read full
review here
Stars: 2.5/5 Site: jewishjournal.com
Besides a
scenerio I’ve seen thousands of times…over the top psychos with lots of tattoos,
a damsel in distress and an anti-hero going against all odds to rescue the
girl, the main character, Agent Snow, spends so much time cracking one joke
after another that I wanted to throw my shoe at him. I get it…This dude doesn’t
do intimacy, but does he have to be so annoyingly glib…Apparently the writers
think he does. Lastly, this film could have taken place in any prison…in any
part of the world…with the exact same script. No one had to travel to space to
bring us a bad version of…‘Die Hard’.
Read full
review here
Stars: 4/10 Site: filmpulse.net
Luc Besson’s
name is all over the marketing for Lockout, the new sci-fi action thriller
directed by James Mather and Stephen St. Leger. From a publicity
standpoint, it makes sense. Besson’s films are always entertaining, and
his better ones invariably become cult classics.Unfortunately,
despite the fact that Besson both co-wrote and produced Lockout, the film just
doesn’t live up to its billing.
Read full
review here
Stars: 2.5/10 Site: cinemablend.com
That line is
one of many make-or-break moments in Lockout, when you can decide as an
audience to laugh at its audacity and keep going, or to shut down entirely to
this movie's macho, hoo-rah appeal. The charm here is a little thinner than
some of the other brash action movies to come from producer Luc Besson's
hivemind-- it's no Taken, despite the presence of Maggie Grace as the kidnap
victim once again, and it's missing the blunt-force dynamism of District B13.
But it also has a trump card in the form of Guy Pearce, who unleashes a
growling, muscular id as disagreed government agent Snow sent in to rescue the
FIrst Daughter because he's got nothing left to lose. In his best scenes he
makes Lockout feel special and vibrant, but when he's gone, the movie can be a
surprising slog for something so silly.
Read full
review here
Stars: 2.5/5 Site: uk.movies.ign.com
As for the
actual action, it's decent fare. When it's not hopelessly rendered alongside
copious amounts of sub-par CGI, the chase scenes and gun fights are actually
pretty fun. Despite a few jarring green screen spectacles, the movie does a
good job of integrating its practical sets and using a gritty lens to better
mask its low-budget production value.
Read full
review here
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