‘Red Notice’ Review: Gal Gadot is fantastic in an otherwise forgettable heist film

Dwayne Johnson and Gal Gadot in Red Notice.

A film with a cast that features Dwayne Johnson, Ryan Reynolds and Gal Gadot shouldn’t be as disappointing as Red Notice.

The chemistry between Johnson, Reynolds and Gadot is the film’s main redeeming quality. Johnson and Reynolds should work well and they do have good chemistry. However, the film ratchets up the stakes at such lightning-fast speeds it’s hard to feel anchored to anything in this story.

Reynolds’s comedy can be hit-or-miss depending on the director and script. Free Guy is a great example of a film that uses Reynolds’s unique comedic voice in the right ways. In Red Notice, he’s constantly rattling off punchlines and only about 5 of those jokes actually hit. Johnson is good in the lead, but it’s basically a spin on his character from the Fast and Furious franchise.

Gadot is the reason to watch this film. Her performance as Wonder Woman has provided a noble quality the role requires. As a supporting character here, she gets to let loose and have fun as the antagonist. She maintains the sexy badass quality you’d expect from Gadot but adds a comedic touch and scene-chewing quality the film needs. Unfortunately, her character pops in and out of the film a lot. When she comes back on-screen, she lifts the film up to an almost absurd degree.

The action scenes are fine, but if action setpieces featuring Johnson, Gadot and Reynolds are what you’re looking for, Red Notice is clearly the worst action film featuring these characters. Jungle Cruise, Zack Snyder’s Justice League and Free Guy are much better action films.

Red Notice does feature a variety of locations. Many of them are gorgeous and shot beautifully by director Rawson Marshall Thurber. Due to the film’s fast pacing, there’s little time spent at each location.

The best part of Red Notice is the ending. An ending so good that it sets up a far more interesting movie than what’s on display in Red Notice. What’s insane about the ending is that it showcases what this film should have been all along.

With the overview out of the way, let’s dive deeper into the best art thieves in the world. There may be minor spoilers. Red Notice is streaming on Netflix.

If you like the content on The Intersection and have the means, a donation is much appreciated. The Intersection will never have ads on the website. To expand coverage to golden-era tv shows and add new features, we need your help. You can provide a one-time donation via PayPal or Stripe below.

Processing ...
Stripe Payments requires Javascript to be supported by the browser in order to operate.

Partners in Crime in Red Notice

FBI profiler John Hartley (Johnson) and art thief Nolan Booth (Reynolds) don’t start out on the best of terms. Hartley’s able to track down Booth and reclaim a valuable gold egg that serves as the poorly realized MacGuffin in the film.

With the egg in his possession, Interpol arrests Hartley for attempting to steal the egg. In one of the many plot contrivances, Hartley is sent to the eastern European prison as Booth. After a lot of squabbling, they agree to work together to find out who’s responsible, which is where Gadot as The Bishop arrives on the scene.

The Best Art Thief in the World

The Bishop is a step ahead of the boys throughout the film. In prison, she wants Hartley and Booth to work together to find the last egg. The men turn down this offer.

Throughout the film, Hartley and Booth are never able to keep up with The Bishop. She’s smarter and a better fighter. The scenes between all three of these actors work well. They simply just don’t happen enough in the film.

Gadot’s action scenes are also better than anything Johnson and Reynolds pull off in this film. You will probably be asking yourself how she is so far ahead of them. While the ending doesn’t eliminate all of the nonsense in the rest of the film, the twist does show how she was able to seemingly best Hartley and Booth.

Dad Issues Galore

The only time the film takes a beat and tries to develop these characters is on the subject of their respective fathers.

Hartley decided to become a cop due to the contempt he has for his father who was a thief. Booth became a thief out of defiance to his father who was a cop. It’s one of the few occasions in the film that you feel like these two characters have common ground. It’s also the only time Hartely lets Booth into his mindset and past. From this point forward, Hartely and Booth do start to work together better. Prior to this moment, even though they were trying to work together, the path wasn’t exactly smooth.

The rest of the Red Notice is a mad dash to see who can locate and secure the last egg first. There’s even a cavernous car chase that bears a strong resemblance to Fast & Furious (2009), which was Gadot’s big-screen debut.

Red Notice Final Thoughts

There’s nothing novel about action sequences and the comedy misses far too often to enjoy the considerable chemistry between Johnson and Reynolds. However, Gadot’s scene-chewing turn as the antagonist and well-done twist ending does make Red Notice a bit better than a total disaster.

The Review

Red Notice

4.5 Score

PROS

  • Gal Gadot is the best part of this film. Her comedy, action scenes and scene-chewing skills shows how much she's grown as an actress.
  • Dwayne Johnson and Ryan Reynolds have good chemistry.
  • Cool twist ending.

CONS

  • Terrible story and plot.
  • Some of the worst dialogue this year.
  • Action scenes aren't anything special.
  • Ending sets up a sequel that should have just been this film.

Review Breakdown

  • Disappointing 4.5
Liked it? Take a second to support Chris Lee on Patreon!
Exit mobile version