Gerard Butler has something that few actors have: presence. He strides into each frame with a burly glower and dares you to tell him he isn’t wearing pants. He growls his every line like a tiger defending his cubs. Gerard Butler is a movie star in a very classical way. You go into a Gerard Butler film just wanting him to preen before you and stab people in the chest, and in a film like London Has Fallen, that’s all you really need and all you’re really going to get.
London Has Fallen is such an irresponsible motion picture that it borders on sublimity. The sequel to 2013’s Olympus Has Fallen, which was a perfectly functional Die Hard ripoff, arrives with a broader scope and a more unsettling agenda. A villain whose family died in a U.S. drone strike attacks a gathering of foreign leaders and kills every diplomat except the American president, forcing Butler’s Secret Service agent to save the day. That’s pretty much the whole film in a nutshell: London Has Fallen is the kind of movie that would assassinate every world leader in pornographic detail, just to make Americans feel better about themselves. To protect foreign countries, it’s up to these Americans to kill every non-American they can find.
Never mind that Gerard Butler is so Scottish that he drops the whole pretense halfway through the movie and finishes London Has Fallen with a full-tilt brogue. All that matters is that he has big speeches about defending America and fucking anyone who doesn’t like the way we conduct our foreign policy. The movie concludes with a different speech, read by a very respectable actor, who argues that the message of this motion picture we just watched is that America may not be perfect but it is still completely justified in killing everyone who scares us. London Has Fallen: it’s Team America: World Police but without the irony.
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Gramercy Pictures
Also: What’s the Best ‘Die Hard’ Ripoff Ever?
So Gerard Butler gets to play the hero even while he interrogates his prisoners by impaling them repeatedly through the rib cage. It should be offensive, and in a vacuum it is, but the absolute ludicrous way that London Has Fallen allows itself to be told keeps our vitriol at a minimum. This is a childish battle cry made by people who just really wanted to watch Gerard Butler stab more people over the course of an evening than Jason Voorhees did throughout his entire career.
And the whole movie is so full of plot holes and absurd ideas that criticizing them seems trivial: you wouldn’t tell a five-year-old that his action figure playtime is based on a faulty premise, and you wouldn’t tell the makers of London Has Fallen that in a crisis, everyone in a major metropolitan city wouldn’t politely stay inside. There should be people out there seeking aid and offering it, there should be looters and rabble-rousers. At the very least someone would probably be poking their head out the window once in a while, but instead the majority of London Has Fallen takes place on streets emptier than the ones in 28 Days Later.
London Has Fallen exists in a strange and awkward limbo where violence is always justified if an American does it (or at least, if a Scotsman playing an American does it). It’s so deliriously insipid that it’s impossible to take seriously, in large part because it takes itself so seriously. I kind of have to recommend it, not because it’s a good movie but because it’s an amazing carnival sideshow. All it does is spout jingoistic gibberish and show off its cartoonishly oversized testicles. If that’s all you paid money to see, then you will get a return on that investment.
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.
Action Movie Sequels That Overshadowed The Original:
Top Photo: Gramercy Pictures
Action Movie Sequels That Overshadowed The Original
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Captain America: The Winter Soldier
The first Captain America was took place entirely in World War II and evoked a classic adventure serial feel. The follow-up dropped Cap into the present day and upped all the stakes, as a sinister conspiracy damn near destroys America and our hero's best friend returns to kill him. Ambitious, action-packed, and game-changing for the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Photo: Marvel Studios
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The Dark Knight
Batman got his dignity back in Batman Begins, but with the origin story out of the way, Christopher Nolan was able to direct an intense follow-up that challenged our hero's ideals and gave him the scariest version of The Joker ever, played by the late, great, Oscar-winning Heath Ledger.
Photo: Warner Bros.
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Fast Five
It took five films for the Fast and Furious movies to finally get the mix right, ditching the street racing drama for an ensemble heist flick packed with crazy stunts and family values. Future films in this series may have made more money, but they all followed the template that Fast Five set for the series.
Photo: Universal Pictures
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G.I. Joe: Retaliation
The first live-action G.I. Joe movie made money but pissed fans off with its jokey tone and changes to the storyline. Jon M. Chu's follow-up still had problems, but it righted a lot of wrongs by killing off extraneous characters, fixing Cobra Commander and recreating a classic mountaintop ninja fight from the comics.
Photo: Paramount Pictures
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Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol
Every Mission: Impossible movie so far has had a different filmmaker, so it makes sense that none of these movies felt like they were of a piece. But Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol seemed to unlock the right formula, and the superior fifth film Rogue Nation followed suit. Brad Bird's entry emphasized a whole team of bickering agents, increasingly impossible situations and fantastic, gorgeously photographed stunts.
Photo: Paramount
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The Road Warrior
The first Mad Max introduced us to a cop trying to stave off apocalyptic anarchy. In The Road Warrior the world has finally, officially ended and violent punks are fighting for the last of the gasoline, and our hero has abandoned his soul for pragmatism. Groundbreaking action scenes and a distinctive vision of the future codified the post-apocalyptic genre for decades to come. (And yes, Mad Max: Fury Road is even better, but time will tell how influential it is.)
Photo: Warner Bros.
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Spider-Man 2
Sam Raimi's original Spider-Man was the blockbuster superhero movie that defined the whole genre, but the second film upped the ante with a villain who actually looked cool (heck, Doctor Octopus looks fantastic), a more thoughtful storyline about the price of responsibility and a wicked sense of humor that treats our hero as a punching bag. Practically everyone still agrees that Spider-Man 2 is the best Spidey film yet.
Photo: Columbia Pictures
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Superman II
The first Superman made audiences believe that a man can fly, but it failed to take advantage of the action-packed possibilities. Superman II introduced a whole team of Kryptonian villains, led by Terence Stamp as the deliciously egomaniacal General Zod. Sure, Superman only fights them at the end (and he murders them all in cold blood as soon as they're powerless), but it's still the movie that everyone points to as the Superman flick that came closest to capturing the feel of the comics.
Photo: Warner Bros.
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Terminator 2: Judgment Day
James Cameron's original The Terminator was more of a sci-fi/horror movie than a proper action film, but in the sequel he turned it all around, empowering the heroes and teaming them up with Arnold Schwarzenegger's flesh-covered robot to fight an unstoppable liquid metal badass. Innovative visual effects, exceptional characters and some of the coolest action sequences ever filmed.
Photo: TriStar Pictures
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The Wolverine
X-Men Origins: Wolverine was such a colossal misfire that the marketing for Deadpool had to actually apologize for it. But even before that, The Wolverine was eager to get the character back on track with a film that removed his invulnerability (for a while anyway), and evoked the classic samurai stories from the comics. The Wolverine is the closest we've ever seen to an accurate depiction of the beloved comic book character.
Photo: 20th Century Fox
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X-Men: Days of Future Past
The X-Men movies helped make superhero films a popular genre, but the formula hadn't been figured out yet and most of the sequels floundered in confusing mythology and missed opportunities. Days of Future Past finally told one of the best stories from the comics, got it kinda right, and reset the whole continuity to set the stage for better sequels to come. Unforgettable action and clever reworkings of history made this even more popular than First Class, which was the first step in the right direction for this series since X2.
Photo: 20th Century Fox