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Friday 11 February 2022

Review: Blacklight

Liam Neeson's last team-up with writer-director Mark Williams was the surprisingly sturdy Honest Thief, the kind of late-career Neeson thriller that stays firmly within the audience's comfort zone while providing just enough quirky character moments and decent action to make it an entertaining 90-odd minutes. Now the gang is back with Blacklight, which seems to promise more of the same but ends up reaching for something a little different.

Travis Block (Neeson) specialises in extracting FBI agents from undercover operations too hot to handle. He's been doing this for years off the books for Gabriel Robinson (Aidan Quinn), who's now the head of the FBI and the closest thing Block has to a friend. But he does have a family: his daughter Amanda (Claire van der Boom), who is more than a little wary of her often absent father, and a young granddaughter, who he's rapidly training to be as paranoid as he is.

Meanwhile, the actual story involves Dusty Crane (Taylor John Smith), an undercover agent who's had a severe attack of conscience after being involved in an operation that ended in the murder of a high profile politician. He's trying to tell his story to anyone who'll listen, which (as he's clearly a little unhinged) just means online journalist Mira Jones (Emmy Raver-Lampman). Now Block's latest job is to calm Crane down and bring him in without too many car chases through Melbourne's Southbank precinct pretending to be Washington DC.

While Neeson's presence suggests this will be yet another enjoyable opportunity for him to take out the trash, this is in fact a political thriller where Neeson's character spends much of the film playing second fiddle to the genre's traditional leads - the whistle-blower and the crusading journalist. He's given various bits of personal business to keep him occupied, and there are a handful of striking and well thought out action scenes, but at times this feels like he's been dropped into a story that really doesn't need him.

The flip side of this is that he's still the heart of the film, playing a character that's the most interesting thing on screen. Less may be more, but almost everything about Block feels like it deserved more screen time; a sequence towards the end where he panics over losing contact with his family is more memorable than the various generic threats to democracy discussed around it.

Part of the problem is that there's no mystery behind the conspiracy. We almost always know what's going on before Block does, so many of his early scenes are just waiting for him to get caught up. It's noticable that the few scenes that feature actual surprises - or just Block professionally doing his job - are easily the most effective here. 

Despite the at-times stylish direction and strong performances, too often the story in Blacklight gets in its own way: half as much going on (leaving more room for Block to electrocute the bad guys and train a pre-schooler to always count the exits) would have been twice as engaging.

- Anthony Morris

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