The movie runs a marathon 164 minutes, but you don't have to look far or long for signs of that conservatism. Trisha, an active participant in Mani Ratnam's magnificent Ponniyin Selvan diptych, is here reduced to the status of brow-furrowing wife and inevitable damsel-in-distress. (Unlike Maria Bello in the Cronenberg History, she doesn't even get to bust out the cheerleader garb: it's the direction that most aggressively shakes its pompoms for our guy.) Anirudh Ravichander's songs are so on-the-nose they practically constitute a clip round the ear: bellows of "I'm shit-scared" to establish the threat facing the family, while the revelation of Parthiban's secret identity cues the almost admirably primitive couplet "Mr. Leo Das is a badass/He's gonna kick your sad ass". A further show of basic-bitch intent comes with the arrival of the film's ultimate big bad: Kanagaraj sends on no-one so sly as William Hurt, rather the brute force of Sanjay Dutt as a tobacco-growing Satanist. (Transferrable skills, maybe?) To be fair, having straightened out the central conflict like a wet locker room towel, Kanagaraj gives it a fair flick for his setpieces: a colossal fist fight that comprehensively does for the fixtures of the Wild Beans Café, a cavalry charge home that sees Parthiban mount a gleaming white stallion (told you he was a hero), a genuinely inventive warehouse set-to viewed from the POV of a hawk circling the action. What's been lost in translation is Olson/Cronenberg's stealth and guile. Where the earlier film found ways to metabolise its hero's backstory, Leo's second half grinds to a halt with a flashback that briefs latecomers and opens up a strain of filmi self-reflexivity (including a jokey Anurag Kashyap cameo) but never feels anything other than superfluous. Its presence ensures Leo fits the template of the needlessly overextended multiplex actioner: while bigger and longer than the Cronenberg equivalent, this history of violence is also notably thinner, somewhere between stirring and lumbering on a scene-by-scene basis and forgettable thereafter. Amid its punchdrunk final act - taking in CG pile-ups, gardens full of mantraps and ugly cuts to ensure the 15 certificate - I began to wonder whether this wasn't one of those remakes compiled with exhausting enthusiasm by a fanboy who'd completely missed his inspiration's point.
Leo is now playing in selected cinemas.
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