The Avengers
Ralph Fiennes, excellent actor though he may be, is no Patrick Macnee when it
comes to a bowler hat -- he looks like a baffled ferret. But that's the least
of The Avengers' problems. The TV series charmed with its blithely
Magritte-like look, Chesterton-lite capers, ironic banter, and a pair of heroes
sprung fully formed from the forehead of '60s British cool. Not only does the
movie squander all that, it wastes one of the more impressive casts of the
summer.
Fiennes is John Steed, an upper-crust bowlered 'n' brollied secret agent for
the Ministry. Already the film is in trouble, as, unlike the original, it feels
compelled to explain the self-evident. The Ministry has a Father (Richard
Broadbent, in a wheelchair) and a Mother (Fiona Shaw sans
wheelchair, but looking more like Peter Sellers's Dr. Strangelove). And Steed's
partner, the mysterious Mrs. Emma Peel (Uma Thurman in the part made famous by
Diana Rigg), is now a mundane metereologist with a snazzy wardrobe and no gift
for repartee.
Not that anything would help the film's f/x-addled excuse for a plot. We get
occasional glimpses of August De Wynter (Sean Connery, content to collect a
check and watch his stunt double battle Fiennes's stunt double), a deranged
scientist blackmailing the world by controlling the weather, and the standard
shots of landmarks leveled by lightning bolts and tornadoes. And then there is
Peel's clone double, unaccounted for and inconsequential. Hapless director
Jeremiah Chechik's gratuitous flashes of the surreal (bad guys disguised as
teddy bears, De Wynter's Marienbad-like manor) merely underscore the film's
cluelessness. Far from improving on the original, The Avengers makes a
travesty of it. At the Harbour Mall, Lincoln Mall, Opera House, Showcase,
Tri-Boro, Westerly, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Peter Keough