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Female action star packs a punch in Soderbergh's 'Haywire'

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Female action star packs a punch in Soderbergh's 'Haywire'
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Film Review Haywire
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  • Film Review Haywire
  • Film Review Haywire

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Gina Carano has a face that can hold a Hollywood close-up and a fist that can hold your nose until it comes clean off.

And that's cool.

Steven Soderbergh cast this mixed martial arts star and model in "Haywire" and surrounded her with experienced actors because he wanted to see an action movie starring a woman who could credibly beat the living daylights out of legions of guys who got in her way. No "Bourne" or "Bond" quick cuts and shaky cameras to hide the speed of the punches, the athleticism of the brawlers.

This, too, is cool.

Carano holds her own in this sauntering film that's slyly funny at times as various men — Ewan McGregor, Channing Tatum, Michael Fassbender — in the spy game underestimate agent Mallory Kane (Carano). Or don't underestimate her.

Kane, working as a private contractor for Kenneth (McGregor), has been set up. She's trying to figure out who betrayed her. Was it Kenneth? The government guy, Coblenz (Michael Douglas), who uses Kenneth's team? Rodrigo, the mysterious Spaniard (Antonio Banderas)?

Screenwriter Lem Dobbs ("The Limey," "The Score") frames much of the story in flashback, as Mallory takes off with the civilian (Michael Angarano) who tried to save her from a Tatum beatdown in a diner. She took a lot of kicks and punches, and a grazing bullet wound.

"Put your seat belt on," she orders. "You're going to fix my arm while we drive."

They hurtle along, making their getaway, and Mallory tells her story and makes the kid memorize details so that he can go to the authorities when they're caught. She expects to be caught. Heck, she kind of wants it.

Pretty cool.

Soderbergh's innate cynicism and lack of empathy for his characters bubbles through, as it did most notably in "Contagion," and that, too, might be called cool, though the better label is "chilly." That means we're not as engaged to Mallory as we might be, that there's little warmth to the character's romantic partners or even to her scenes with her rich novelist ex-Marine dad (Bill Paxton).

Yes, there have been action heroines before, from "Dark Angel" and "Tomb Raider" to the less realistic and superior "Hanna" last spring. But Carano brings an arresting screen presence and an instant credibility — she's beautiful, but solidly built — to screen action that's been missing.

Who knew the new Jean-Claude Van Damme, Chuck Norris and Jet Li would be a woman?


"Haywire"

Two and a half stars (out of four) • Rating R • Run time 1:33 • Content Some violence

Copyright 2012 stltoday.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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