Bright * / *****
Directed by: David Ayer.
Written by: Max Landis.
Starring: Will Smith (Daryl Ward),
Joel Edgerton (Nick Jakoby), Noomi Rapace (Leilah), Lucy Fry (Tikka), Édgar
Ramírez (Kandomere), Ike Barinholtz (Gary Harmeyer), Happy Anderson (Montehugh),
Kenneth Choi (Agent Coleman).
I’ve
defended Netflix for most of 2017, as it certainly seems like the streaming
service has taken its lumps from critics and cinephiles who wish that some of
their films got theatrical releases, instead of showing up directly onto their
website. Sure, films like Okja, Mudbound and The Meyerowitz Stories (New and
Selected) would not feel out of place in art house theaters around the country
– but I understand that’s not really Netflix’s business model, and say that the
problem isn’t that Netflix is putting these films on their site – but that no
other studio in town would finance them in the first place. Any studio could
have bought Mudbound for instance – but none of them did, except for Netflix.
The site has also been a boon to documentaries as well. Sure, I have nits to
pick with them – they still haven’t figured out how to make their original
movies into events like they have with their TV shows. Sadly, the first real
blockbuster Netflix has attempted – that has apparently gotten the views – is
the worst Netflix original (of any kind) that I have seen so far. David Ayer’s
Bright is a confused and confusing mess of a film, with big writing, bad acting
and bad everything else bringing the film down to ridiculous levels.
The
film is directed by David Ayer – who before he made last year’s horrible
Suicide Squad, had made any number of films about the tough cops of the LAPD –
some great (he wrote Training Day and Dark Blue, and wrote and directed End of
Watch), some not so great (Sabotage, Harsh Times). With Bright, he has
essentially returned to the genre – except in some sort of weird alternate
universe, which humans lives alongside orcs and fairies, and other strange
creatures. The screenplay, by Max Landis, tries very, very hard to draw racial
parallels to the way orcs are treated in this world, and how African Americans
are treated in ours (a rather insulting comparison, if you think about it) –
none of it really works.
In
the film, Will Smith stars as Daryl Ward, a veteran beat cop who has been
teamed up with Nick Jakoby (Joel Edgerton) – the first ever Orc cop on the
LAPD. The opening scene sees Daryl get shot, and Nick failing to capture the
criminal who did it – everyone thinks that he let the shooter get away because
it was another orc, and orcs cannot be trusted. Everyone wants Nick out – and
go to Daryl to try and help them do it. Then, through a series of events too
complicated to comprehend, the two partners essentially have to go on the run
together – they have a wand, and everyone wants the wand, and everyone will
kill for the wand – including their own fellow cops.
I
wish I could work up much hatred for Bright – hatred at least makes things
interesting – but I really can’t. To be honest, I was pretty much bored from
beginning to end of the film. The cast is full of talented stars – not least of
which is Smith, who you could normally count on to deliver great amounts of
charm in his roles, but now just seems to be coasting. The rest of the cast is
wasted – with not even the great Edgerton being able to leave an impact on the
film.
Up
until Bright, I could defend the choices Netflix was making by saying that were
funding the kind of films no one else would – they were daring, and edgy – and
even if they didn’t all work, you admire them for going for it. Bright is the
exact opposite of those films in pretty much every way.
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