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'Red Sparrow': An entertaining espionage drama (IANS Review, Rating: ***1/2)

IANS 

Film: "Red Sparrow"; Director: Francis Lawrence; Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Joel Edgerton, Matthias Schoenaerts, Jeremy Irons, Mary-Louise Parker, Charlotte Rampling, Ciaran Hinds; Rating: ***1/2

Based on the similarly titled novel penned by former CIA Jason Matthews, Francis Lawrence's espionage thriller is an icy, controlled, provocative and at times a deliberately problematic piece of work.

Set in an interesting period that suggests the existence of the Cold War between the US and Russia, the lurks in the shadows where trust is a commodity that no one can afford to lose for the fear of sparking a huge international embarrassment or a full-scale war.

The narrative follows a Russian Ballerina Dominika Egorova, who is forced by her uncle (Matthias Schoenaerts) to enter SVR - the Service. She is enrolled in a secret school for spies where she is trained to become a "Sparrow".

The core of the programme is solely to be trained in the ways of seduction in order to extract information from the opponents. After a humiliating and gruelling training that strips Dominika to her core while broadening her understanding of her own abilities, she is sent to to set upon CIA agent Nate Nash (Joel Edgerton) in the hope of exposing a high-ranking mole in the

attraction of this is As Dominika Egorova, she literally strips herself of any inhibition present. Her interpretation of the character elevates the material in hand at all times. From dancing ballet to being tortured, Lawrence does a fantastic job of showing us the strongest and weakest moments of her character.

as the CIA man who had to flee after he was nearly caught meeting a high-level feeding the Americans secrets, slips into his role effortlessly. His onscreen chemistry with Lawrence is palpable.

Apart from the duo, the incredible cast that supports them includes as Stephanie Boucher, the American traitor, as and as Zyuganor, as the Matron of the secret school and as Dominika's shrewd and manipulative Uncle They are all secondary characters, yet they all excel.

Those expecting the to be a high-voltage action-packed thriller would be disappointed.

The contains almost no action, generally relying on dialogues, exposure and constant interaction between key figures within the complicated narrative. In other words, at its centre, the is more drama than action, focusing more on the dehumanisation of training that creates spies and the tangled relationships between agents. There are a few bursts of violence, mostly around intense scenes of torture.

And one of the biggest attractions of the is the relevant topic that it touches. The abuse of power, manipulation, corruption, rape and torture are some of them.

The pacing of the is an issue. There are moments that roll on a really slow burner, but then that's how the was designed.

Technically with ace production values, the is aesthetically mounted. Overall, the is entertaining and is a brilliant character study of an efficient

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, March 01 2018. 19:18 IST
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