Mark Kermode 

Hummingbird – review

Jason Statham will please his legions of fans with this hauntingly shot London thriller, writes Mark Kermode
  
  


"I'm going to kill you… with this spoon." Although it won't be his highest-grossing movie, this flawed but ambitious (and rather peculiar) London-set thriller finds Jason Statham once again broadening his dramatic palette while retaining his trademark homoerotic action base. He plays special-forces soldier turned street-bum "Crazy Joey" who stumbles into a swanky Soho flat that becomes a base from which to rebuild his life, avenge a murder, and play games with his (sexual) identity.

After the lascivious oil-wrestling and male striptease of the Transporter series, the Stath here finds himself surrounded by prominently displayed photos of bound penises. "Are you exclusively gay?" asks a neighbour, to which our hero replies: "Recently I've found myself attracted to nuns" – his relationship with Agata Buzek's Sister of Mercy being one of the film's many oddly upturned generic tropes.

Although the narrative entanglements are overstretched (no surprise from writer/director Steven Knight who penned Eastern Promises), cinematographer Chris Menges rises above the usual seedy Soho visual cliches to conjure some haunting twilight images. One day, an academic will write a paper entitled Jason Statham's Body; Polymorphous Perversity and the Male Gaze in 21st-Century Screen Stardom. Until then, let's just get on with enjoying a singular British icon.

 

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