1,475 days. How long I have been waiting for a “Holow” to come to Netflix. Or keep another way, it is 2,124,000 minutes, which is sufficient time to see the last year’s butt-satisfied “the cruel” more than 9,879 times.
Back in April 2021, I wrote on this very website that “the possibility of” hope “would be released in one or a year”. My film Math was clearly closed because after four years, Netflix At the end Gareth Edwards dropped the action-thriller film, and it is now streaming for all.
After seeing Tom Hardy-Abhinit Adrenaline-Boster, I can confirm that it was more than waiting. While the “HOWOL” Edwards’s “The Red” may not be the same as the same gold standard of the franchise (to note, “The Red 2” is my favorite action film), it is delicately entertaining, and delicious pulp, the best original film of Netflix at the age of actioner flipin.
Its dirty story keeps it back with true greatness, but when punches start flowing and pills from all angles, the “Hewlock” provides a level of cinematic enthusiasm that very few action films can match. It is a new Netflix film that does not just request your immediate attention, it positively demands it with all the force of a high-caliber round.
John Vik, Eat your heart
I will cut the bone directly here, when it comes to “havoc”, it is an action sequences that make this action-through merit. Remember that the first “John Vik” film Epic Nichclub Scene in the movie? The performance of the “Holow” on a dingi disco dance floor is like a friendly quarrel among Mr. Vik’s old friends.
Gareth Edwards always had an excellent talent to craft beautifully beautifully beautiful on-screen carnez (see “the ride” films as evidence), and with the “Hawalk”, he conducts a symphony of cruelty. Oh, don’t misunderstand me, it’s a cruel film, but it is also commendable in its commitment to such anarchy. For action movie fans, this dream is accessories.

“Havoc” balances many fighters, originally a full arsenal of the weapon and even different places. Its action sequence is not presented in a single-shot format, but they flow so well that they feel almost so. And when you think that “it will never up that moment,” another bone-oriented hit comes together and crosses it. Time after time.
This is a rare film, where, watching alone in my home office, I really give a cave in the sheer talent of some Savez forts. Of course, I also conquered an entire herd, but all this is part of the Edwards package. I would not say that “havoc” he has Best Battle scenes, but it is probably his most consistent film, each of which is one of the high basic quality.
From a slick opening car chase (some rope in the spot CGI) to the grand finale-an icy shoot-out that proves that there are innumerable angles to shoot-“Hawalk” is not for each other for its love for each other. It feels like 1 hour 50 minutes barely 90.
A city with crime (and determination)

Okay, let’s backup a moment, because at this point, you must be thinking, what is really “havoc”?
The elevator pitch is very shocking: Tom Hardy plays a homeicide detective called Walker with a very checker past, and has marks to show it. On a mission to locate the son of a corrupt politician, he finds himself telling about everyone as he makes his way through the criminal underworld and detects various dark conspiracies.
While “havoc” is never boring for a moment, and wisely there is never too much in the minutiae of its story, things get a bit messed up. So many competitive groups and powerful players are brought to the table that starts to feel like this That spuff scene From “anchorman” where groups of news crew groups appear one after the other.

The unnamed American city where “havoc” is set, there is also a strange, but attractive, Gotham City quality about it. Even a mayor candidate promises to “clean” the place.
In fact, the opening car chase scene has a large “The Batman” energy. The roads of this place seem to be admirable (or even located within North America, most of the films were shot in Wales), but this setting is directly out of a comic book, only “Havok” connects the overall enlarged tone. I never want to stay on the block, walker call home, but I had a great thrilling time to see them for an evening.
Welcome, Tom Hardy

For Hardy, while a walker is not a role that challenges the English actor, I am thrilled to see him back in a quality film. A supporting twist in last year’s underwellade “The Bikeriders”, Hardy has been almost a decade since I acted in a film, which I would consider unevenly good. (I did No Like “poison” trilogy. no way.)
Hardy has a slight channel in the form of Eddie Brock in the “Hewalk”, but the walker has been quite toned, and shaved with Brock’s Alien Symbiot Pal and Exaggerated Ticks, we have left with some great dedapan delivery and a character with some real appeal.

This is not to say that the walker is a hero. He is hiding some real skeletons in his closet. The closest thing we get for a virtuous hero is Jessie Mei Lee’s Ellie, a naive -boring beat coop in the world of walker, and was just trying to remain. She adds the right amount of heart.
Closing the core cast is the one whiteker as the above politician, and Timothy Olephant as a police officer is different from one (intentionally) minutes. Offcents have some solid moments and get a part of the frantic nightclub controversy, but I want Whitekar to be given more to work. He is solid, but feels the most wasted of the artists.
‘Hawalk’ is a Netflix Must-Watch, Period

“Hala” is too much everything I wanted. While I either preferred a more constrained story (a la “the raid”) or to separate the rival forces for each longer to feel differently the runtime (a LA “The Ride 2”), when the flicks makes a head of steam, this minier is faded into the Qualic background and the cacofoni of violence attracts your attention.
I have no doubt that Netflix customers are going to eat this new original film with enthusiasm, and its future number 1 is already safe. I have already written about the crop of this year’s streaming origin, which is more than a little less, but the “havoc” is a real deal: a tireless energetic, impeccable action-thriller that hits with confidence.
Watch “Hellow” on Netflix Now

