The Old Guard.

The Old Guard, now available on Netflix, is an extremely competent action flick that checks just about all of the necessary boxes, with a mostly credible story and some solid character development for its two leads, played by Charlize Theron and Kiki Layne. It’s also a superhero story that has to fit some of the conventions of that particular subgenre, and has some regrettable song choices that often detract from what’s happening on screen, but the two lead actresses are so good, and Theron especially has some incredible fight sequences, that it managed to be better than I’d expect from this sort of film.

Theron plays Andy, the leader of a group of four mercenaries who, we learn very early in the film, can’t die – or, more precisely, don’t stay dead for more than a few seconds. Their bodies heal quickly, even ejecting bullets from their skin, so while our heroes do feel pain, they’re impossible to kill, and have dedicated their long existences to doing good in the world. They’re hired by an ex-CIA man to go rescue a group of kidnapped schoolchildren in South Sudan, but that mission goes awry, leading them to try to figure out who was behind the failure. Around the same time, a new immortal, Nile (Layne), appears to the four heroes in their dreams, so Andy goes on a separate mission to take Nile into their fold, knowing that she can’t continue to live in the human world when she can’t die or even age normally.

There’s a villain, of course, a pharma CEO who is rather one-note as a character and is played perfectly by Harry Melling; if his name isn’t familiar, I won’t spoil why, because the moment when you figure out where you’ve seen him before is pretty incredible. He wants the immortals’ DNA because he sees a way to save humanity, and to turn a tiny little profit too, of course, but while his words seem to favor the former, his actions entirely point to the latter, and he ends up a stock Big Pharma/evil scientist character – as does Anamaria Marinca, who won wide acclaim for her leading role in the Romanian film 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days, but is wasted here as Melling’s lead scientist. The antagonists’ entire argument is that the immortals have an obligation to share their gift, which is presumed to reside in their genes, with the rest of humanity, but that rationale denies the immortals any agency in the decision, and ends up reducing them to the status of lab rats in the eyes of the scientists here.

Based on a series of graphic novels by Greg Rucka, who also wrote the screenplay, The Old Guard feels like an attempt to start up a franchise, especially with the way the ending of the film perfectly sets up a sequel – but it’s effective in that attempt. Andy and Booker, the next-oldest of the four superheroes, are well-drawn, distinctive characters, with varying views on the responsibilities that accompany their gift, while Nile gains depth from her struggle to accept her new powers and the imminent loss of her connections to her family. The other two heroes, Joe and Nicky, both needed a bit more to do as well as some more back story, but they’re notable because they’re a couple, apparently the first out gay superheroes in film, and the script plays that fact as totally unremarkable beyond one interaction with a homophobic mercenary.

The history of this crew is that they go around the world saving people who need saving, trying to do some good, but we don’t actually get any of that in the story here, which is a little bit disappointing since the fight scenes are exceptionally well done (especially when Theron is involved). The two subplots are the battle with Melling for their freedom and survival, and the integration of Nile into their group once they make her understand and accept what’s happened to her, neither of which shows us the Old Guard (who never call themselves that) doing the thing they would typically do. Perhaps that will come in the sequel.

The music in this movie doesn’t just suck, although I would argue that most of the songs on the soundtrack are indeed quite bad, but it’s poorly deployed, with electropop songs playing during what should be tense action sequences. This is the kind of movie that would benefit from less music, or no music at all, given how dark some of its themes are and how brutal the violence can be, although the camera seldom lingers luridly on the violence as it does in, say, Deadpool, where the gore is kind of the point. I was far less bothered by the formulaic parts of The Old Guard, which could just be unavoidable in the genre, than by the obtrusive nature of the soundtrack, which often seemed at odds with the movie’s underlying themes about mortality and meaning. It may be a movie about superheroes with impossible powers, but The Old Guard at least tries to be more serious and thoughtful than the standard MCU film, and by and large it succeeds.

Comments

  1. SPOILERS…

    This movie was enjoyable enough, but I thought the twist betrayal was PRETTY obvious from the get-go. Well, the second twist betrayal (the first one where they all get killed barely counts as a twist right?)
    Casting a guy who looks like a younger Mads Mikkelsen didn’t help.

    Also, the underwater casket… UGH. I had already started imagining the worst case scenarios of immortality when the movie started and came up with that one, and then seeing that they actually had that exact idea and executed it in a way much worse than I was imagining… Triggered all sorts of claustrophobia. Same reason I can’t watch Kill Bill Vol. 2.
    Still… Will def watch any sequels. And not just because Theron is good in everything…

  2. Her fight scenes in Atomic Blonde were great also. I haven’t seen this yet, but in Atomic Blonde she did a surprisingly good job of looking like she’d actually been in a fight.

    • The stairwell fight scene didn’t matter much to the plot, but in technical terms I think it’s the best fight scene ever done by an A-list Hollywood actor. Or was, until the entire first act of John Wick 3.

  3. I guess Deadpool isn’t up your alley, Keith, because Negasonic Teenage Warhead is out in the sequel (as well as her girlfriend for that matter), beating The Old Guard by two years. https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/deadpool-2-yukio-negasonic-lgbtq-superheroes/

    That said, my one of my favorite authors, Penny Red, had a perfect description of The Old Guard:

    Hang on a second. This is just someone’s Anne Rice fanfic with the serial numbers filed off. Straight out of the slashiest angstiest plot-what-plottiest corner of A03. Plus Charlize Theron.
    *thinks*
    *smashes glass on bar*
    BRING ME ANOTHER.

  4. Agree w/ both you and Dave. She’s amazing and don’t forget about Mad Max–what a treasure Charlize is.