Suicide Squad is
an ugly, shapeless, and noisy pileup of bad ideas and sloppy execution for so
long it’s almost a relief when it gives up the pretense of doing something
remotely new with the superhero genre and collapses into the same predictable
CG autopilot required of every movie of this kind. The concept sounds terrific
on paper: a Dirty Dozen made up of
lesser-known villains from Batman’s rouges gallery. A tough security adviser
(Viola Davis) gets permission to recruit the worst of the worst from a maximum-security
prison to send on certain-doom longshot missions against supervillains. Who can
say, her reasoning goes, if the next Superman will turn out to wish us harm?
And who, if that happens, could stop him? That’s a clever hook, theoretically
able to look at a superhero world from a different angle. And yet this movie
can barely figure out how to tell its story, loaded up with false starts and weak
characterization, roping in endless exposition and tonal whiplash until finally
it just turns into a CG shooting gallery.
There’s trouble right at the start as the movie introduces
the Suicide Squad haphazardly and repeatedly. First, there’s a prologue tour of
the prison where we meet a few of the big stars, including Will Smith as
preternaturally accurate hitman Deadshot and Margot Robbie as mentally
unbalanced crime jester Harley Quinn. Then we follow Davis to a dinner meeting
where she pitches her idea for a team of super-powered criminals. She reads
their names and describes their abilities, which are repeated in on-screen text
popping up next to freeze-frames in extended flashbacks. There’s a guy who’s
really good at throwing boomerangs (Jai Courtney) and a firestarter (Jay
Hernandez), and a guy who looks like a reptile (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje). Then
we’re with the squad’s military leader (Joel Kinnaman) meeting the bad guys all
over again, even repeating some footage we’ve already seen. Yet then we’re
still finding out about new people – a witch (Cara Delevingne), a masked woman
with a sword (Karen Fukuhara), a guy who is really good at climbing (Adam
Beach) – with a tossed off explanation or belabored flashback as they show up.
Surely there was an easier way to establish the ensemble than all these
convoluted repetitions.
Writer-director David Ayer’s previous film, World War II
tank actioner Fury, was also a
men-on-a-mission ensemble effort, but it allowed its cast to build a rapport in
a plot that had a streamlined sense of purpose with real weight. Suicide Squad feels hacked to pieces and
carelessly stitched back together with whatever bits were easiest to pick back
up. It’s airless cacophony, sloppily constructed out of competing impulses,
less a movie, more a collection of moments indifferently assembled. It’s badly
lit bad behavior trying very hard to be adolescent edgy, casually dropping
PG-13 profanity and endless rounds of gunfire, random murder, and police brutality. The movie trades
on images of cruelty and smarm, sexualizing or tokenizing its women and
stereotyping its characters of color. It revels in unpleasant violence and
mayhem, carrying on with machine gun assaults and squirmy intimidation,
eventually introducing an army of faceless zombified citizens with craggy rock
faces blown to bits in headshots and decapitations lovingly displayed. This may
be the most violent PG-13 I’ve ever seen, not only for its explicit nastiness, but
also for the general nihilistic spirit.
The heroes are villains – one of the intended Suicide Squad
is the arbitrary nonsensical Big Bad – and the villains are heroes. And yet
it’s a muddle with no true north on its moral compass. Good and bad don't mean anything. It features an assassin
we’re to like because Will Smith is charming, and Viola Davis – our rooting
interest, mind you – ruthlessly murdering innocent colleagues. Good guy Batman
(Ben Affleck, making a stop between Batman
v Superman and next year’s Justice
League) briefly appears to punch a woman in the face. And Thirty Seconds to
Mars’ frontman cameos as the Joker (surely among the most breathlessly
overhyped performances in movie history), massacring dozens, but we’re supposed
to go easy on him because he’s doing it for love (of the woman he’s abused). Some
of the characters’ origin stories are so horrific – like Harley Quinn, a
psychiatrist tortured to insanity by an inmate – that it’s sad to see them
ground under the movie’s flippant approach. Robbie, a fine actress, is tasked
with playing Harley as a walking quip in hot pants objectified in every frame,
a difficult thing to reconcile with the coy references to her trauma. Yet still
others go entirely uncharacterized, like the boomerang thrower who has a
gargling Australian accent and that’s where his character traits end.
Because there’s no clear perspective beyond rank “ain’t I a
stinker?” self-satisfaction and the whole thing grinds to an inevitable, if
indifferently set up, conclusion of metropolitan carnage with a CG creature
summoning apocalyptic beams of light shooting into the sky, nothing connects or
makes an impact. There’s no sense of shape or momentum to the story. The team
never makes sense as a unit, and the characters never come to life beyond
whatever fleeting moments of personality the better actors can manage. In the
early going, scenes are placed next to each other in what might as well be
random order. By the time it settles down it’s dreary and predictable. It
certainly doesn’t help how misjudged it is on every aesthetic level. The
dialogue is flat and half-aware. The smeary cinematography is dim. The
production design is like an explosion at a Hot Topic. It’s scored with a
busted jukebox puking out snippets of obvious tunes (a bad attention-deficit copy
of the Guardians of the Galaxy
mixtape). The whole thing is one futile attempt after the next to make boring
or baffling or distasteful moments something like entertainment. So loud and
obnoxious, overstuffed and undercooked, it’s ultimately just tiring. It
definitely puts the anti in anti-hero.
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