The Sequel to “Sicario” Pulls No Punches
Jul 16, 2018 • Macky Macarayan
Jul 16, 2018 • Macky Macarayan
By Macky Macarayan
Emily Blunt is out, yet the stakes are even higher in this follow-up to the 2015 critically-acclaimed “Sicario.” Josh Brolin and Benicio Del Toro reprise their roles as CIA agent Matt Graver and black operative Alejandro Gillick, as the U.S. inadvertently begins a war with the Mexican government (we’re talking about the film here, but you cannot be faulted for mistaking the plot with real events). Billed as “Sicario: Day of the Soldado” in the U.S., the film is locally marketed as “Soldado: The Soldier,” which is kind of redundant because soldado already means soldier. Marketing SNAFU aside, this “Sicario” sequel delivers on all of its promises and more.
In case you were hiding under a rock, you know that Donald Trump wants to build a wall that separates the U.S. from Mexico. Well that premise figures prominently in this movie (there’s even a shot of a long fence, which can be considered a wall, if you thought about it). Also, there are the overarching themes of xenophobia, radicalism and government conspiracy amidst all that shooting and blood splatter.
“Sicario” scribe Taylor Sheridan returns to spin a yarn of continuing homeland tension, while Stefano Sollima takes over directing duties from Denis Villeneuve; meanwhile, Dariusz Wolski replaces Roger Deakins as cinematographer, yet we get the same feel from the first film— the unrelenting terror, the brutality, and the never ending play of light and shadows. The first film was shocking enough, but this one takes the violence onscreen notches higher.
The filmmakers basically took the elements that worked well in the first film and improved them for this sequel. One of those elements is the strong female presence of Emily Blunt, which of course had to be compensated. The replacement is two-fold: first, Catherine Keener does what she does best as a cold authoritative figure who firmly throws orders even without lifting an eyebrow; then, Isabella Moner plays the kidnapped daughter of a Mexican kingpin, and Moner, despite the towering male presence in the film, manages to display a mixture of spunk and nuanced vulnerability.
Capitalism is alive and well, in case you were thinking that we are living in a better world (spoiler alert, we’re not). Graver and company were put in a delicate situation because the Mexican police escorting them turn out to be on the cartels’ payroll, and yes, war is a very profitable business, especially for the U.S.
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