3.5 stars. Rated R, for violence, profanity, fleeting nudity and brief drug use
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 11.25.16
At first blush, this feels like
an old-style WWII espionage drama of the sort whose absence is lamented by
longtime moviegoers — such as my parents — who often grouse that They Don’t
Make ’Em Like This Anymore.
Given the French Moroccan
setting, stars with the wattage of Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard, and a
swooningly romantic script that even name-checks Casablanca, one almost expects
Bogie and Bacall to come strolling in from the surrounding desert.
Steven Knight is a terrific
screenwriter, with solid experience in the crime and espionage genres; his
highlights include 2002’s Dirty Pretty Things and 2007’s Eastern Promises. No surprise, then: He delivers a corker of a first act for Allied, and then
swings the plot into an unexpected direction that cranks up the suspense.
Unfortunately, things get messy
during an contrived third act, which piles eye-rolling coincidence atop unrealistic
behavior, the latter from characters who’ve previously been depicted as far too
intelligent, to suddenly turn brainless. Cut to a positively eye-rolling
epilogue, and the film squanders the considerable good will that it has built.
Seriously, Steven ... what were
you thinking?
In fairness, such climactic,
over-the-top melodrama also is old-school, so Knight and director Robert
Zemeckis obviously knew precisely what they were doing. I’m simply not sure
that today’s savvier viewers will be as willing to forgive such theatrical
excess, as was the case back in the 1940s and ’50s.
And it’s a shame, because the
first 90 minutes are thoroughly compelling, and — yes — luxuriously
atmospheric.
The year is 1942, and the film
opens as Canadian airman Max Vatan (Pitt) parachutes into the desert outside of
Casablanca. His emergency mission, orchestrated by the British Special
Operations Executive (BSOE): to assassinate Germany’s visiting ambassador. The
groundwork for this mission has been established by undercover French
resistance fighter Marianne Beauséjour (Cotillard), who has spent weeks among
her Nazi “friends,” waxing eloquent about the beloved husband soon to visit
from Paris.
The handsome and affable Max
looks and sounds the part ... to a point. As Marianne immediately notices, his
carefully rehearsed accent is more Québécois than Parisian, which is a problem:
French Moroccans wouldn’t know the difference, but he’d never fool Nazi
officials who had spent any time in France.