logo
‘Havoc' Review: In Gareth Evans' Dark, Destructive Netflix Outing, Only Tom Hardy's Reputation Remains Unscathed

‘Havoc' Review: In Gareth Evans' Dark, Destructive Netflix Outing, Only Tom Hardy's Reputation Remains Unscathed

Yahoo13-05-2025

At first, 'Havoc' sounds like just another one of those generic, one-word titles Hollywood slaps on action movies to convey a terse, efficient shoot-'em-up. Why give such projects a long-winded name like 'A Clear and Present Danger' or 'Every Which Way but Loose' when you can find something punchy like 'Taken,' 'Crank' or 'Drive'? Look it up in the dictionary, however, and 'havoc' doesn't simply mean 'devastation' (of which there is plenty in 'The Raid' director Gareth Evans' excessively violent Netflix outing), but also some mix of confusion, mayhem and all-around disorder (which spoils whatever fun a couple over-the-top set-pieces deliver).
Looking worse for wear than Bruce Willis' tank top at the end of 'Die Hard,' Tom Hardy fully commits to the walking stereotype that is Walker, the least bad cop working Christmas Eve in a city that a) doesn't exist, b) seems to be modeled on the scuzzy version of Gotham City seen in 'The Penguin' and c) boasts a triad-run underworld populated by an inexhaustible supply of heavily armed henchmen.
More from Variety
Tom Hardy's 'Havoc' Leads Netflix's Wales Gambit With $265 Million Economic Boost
'MobLand' Episode 2 Recap: Tom Hardy, Pierce Brosnan Break Down the 'Psychosis' Tearing at the Harrigans
Tom Hardy Says Venom Crossover With Tom Holland's Spider-Man 'Got as Close as I Could Possibly Imagine Getting' Before Falling Apart
According to splintered flashbacks scattered throughout the plot like shrapnel, Walker belongs to a tight, thoroughly corrupt gang of narcotics officers (where the most bad is embodied by Timothy Olyphant) who've decided to rip off a whole lot of dope from the people they should be arresting. Walker's captain recognizes him as a rule-breaker, as does real estate mogul-cum-mayoral candidate Lawrence Beaumont (Forest Whitaker), who has Walker to thank for single-handedly saving his political career.
So far, it's all straight from the Shane Black playbook, including cynical repartee with rookie partner Ellie (Jessie Mei Li) and the scene where Walker scours a filthy convenience store looking for a last-minute Christmas gift for his 6-year-old daughter (inexplicably seen playing with a handgun a few seconds shy of the 10-minute mark). While Walker is so distracted, a high-speed chase involving the other four cops in on his dirty-money scheme is unfolding across town.
A semitrailer full of washing machines (which are in turn full of cocaine) is racing toward the freeway — except, none of this looks real. Some guy swings from the rear door of the trailer, but it's quite obviously the camera that's moving, not the vehicle, in the movie's unconvincingly rendered metropolis. These are basically the same VFX tricks the Wachowskis used in 'Speed Racer,' except that movie was meant to suggest the live-action equivalent of anime. 'Havoc' looks cartoonish on accident.
You've heard of organized crime? Now imagine the exact opposite: a clichéd and highly disorganized crime movie in which Evans — who can direct the hell out of an action scene, but struggles with anything remotely dramatic — lards a simple-minded mission to protect Beaumont's son Charlie (Justin Cornwell) with a wildly complicated conspiracy. Evans' convoluted script keeps us guessing for a while as to who is trying to kill Charlie and his three accomplices (yes, the son of the city's leading mayoral candidate was the one stealing washers), but only because there's not enough information at this point to make sense of the plot. Havoc, indeed.
Early action scenes are told in strangely oblique ways, with gunfire erupting off-screen (but little carnage shown) or else via abrupt cuts, filled in later by ultra-violent flashbacks. That's true of Walker's opening crisis of conscience, as well as a heavy-artillery heist on the local Chinese drug dealer (Jeremy Ang Jones), just as Charlie and pals are delivering their haul. When Evans does circle around to showing the shootout, it looks like a scene from such Hong Kong classics as 'Hard Boiled' or 'The Killer,' in which well-dressed Asian extras go cartwheeling in slow motion as squibs explode up and down their dress shirts. (So many practical blood packs make for a nostalgic touch in a movie that otherwise relies rather heavily on CGI.)
Because Charlie and his girlfriend, Mia (Quelin Sepulveda, who would have made a better main character than Walker, with her punkish, young Franka Potente vibe), were present when the raid went down, triad superboss 'Little Sister' (Yeo Yann Yann) shows up with a private army. If you can make it 50 minutes into the movie, you'll be rewarded with a nightclub scene in which Walker, the dirty cops and Little Sister's platoon converge on Charlie and Mia, while Gesaffelstein thunders on the soundtrack.
That would have been a 'cool' music choice 12 years ago, when his 'Aleph' album dropped, but playing three tracks back-to-back-to-back during the 10-minute club sequence so soon after the arrival of Lady Gaga's 'Mayhem' (featuring four Gesaffelstein collaborations) feels late to the party. In any case, it's the right music for a Gareth Evans spectacular, matching Aria Prayogi's dark, industrial-sounding score, but a weird fit for the neon-lit venue or the scene's laid-back DJ, all of which belong to somewhere frat boys and Kardashians hang out, not the final resting place for 50 or so thugs with incredibly bad aim.
For action fans, the club scene will be reason enough to watch, as Evans orchestrates a kinetic bloodbath using split levels and a gnarly mix of machine guns, martial arts and assorted improvised weapons (including steel pipes and butcher knives). 'Kill Bill' it ain't, though the melee is certainly reminiscent of 'The Raid.'
Twenty minutes later, the climax at Walker's personal cabin feels excessive at best, but mostly just exhausting, as the surviving hundred or so characters are winnowed down to a number you could count on one hand. The cheesy screenplay, shallow characters and wince-worthy acting (from all but A-listers Hardy, Whitaker and Olyphant) suggest that Evans might be better suited to specializing in the second unit or action sequences on a major franchise, rather than writing and directing a quasi-dramatic feature.
There's a reason big-studio producers looked to Sundance darlings like Colin Trevorrow, Rian Johnson and Jon Watts to handle their tentpoles: not because those guys are great at action, but because they keep the interpersonal dynamics interesting. That's precisely where Evans wreaks the most havoc, ignoring (or simply not understanding) what connects us to such characters in the first place — and therefore ensuring that his unwieldy Netflix vehicle is dead on arrival.
Best of Variety
The Best Albums of the Decade

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Karate Kid: Legends' took me back to the '80s. For the tweens I watched with, the film packed an emotional punch.
'Karate Kid: Legends' took me back to the '80s. For the tweens I watched with, the film packed an emotional punch.

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Karate Kid: Legends' took me back to the '80s. For the tweens I watched with, the film packed an emotional punch.

This post contains spoilers. Don't say we didn't warn ya. Hello, Yahoo Entertainment readers. My name is Suzy Byrne, and I've been covering entertainment in this space for over a decade — and longer elsewhere, but … details! I am not the cinephile who sees every big, splashy new release the moment it hits theaters. What brings me big-screen joy are kid-friendly flicks — like Lilo & Stitch, which had humor and heart, with my ohana. I'm a tenderhearted moviegoer who doesn't need two hours of explosions/violence/death. But also, as a busy working parent, getting two hours to turn off my phone, put up my feet and eat whatever I want while my child is fully entertained is the definition of movie magic. So that's what this is — one entertainment reporter + her 10-year-old + friends — seeing family-friendly fare, indulging in film-themed treats and replying all, to you, about the experience. Welcome to the kids movie club. 'Wax on, wax off' — those were the last words I heard, courtesy of the guy behind me, as Karate Kid: Legends started and our party of six (three moms, three kids, ages 8-10) settled in to watch. With a 41-year-old franchise — which has spawned six films and the Netflix show Cobra Kai — there's a lot of familiarity with the martial arts franchise from different eras. I remember seeing Karate Kid in the theater during the summer of 1984 — and doing crane kicks on the beach for the rest of my vacation when I wasn't trying to catch flies with chopsticks. When I went home, I cut out photos of Ralph Macchio from Teen Beat and taped them to my bedroom wall. I also vividly remember someone giving me what they claimed was 20-something-year-old Macchio's phone number and calling it — on a corded phone, youngsters — with my friends. I'm pretty sure we hung up on whoever answered. While to this day I could recite most of the film, with all the life lessons Mr. Miyagi taught Daniel-san, you don't have to have seen it or any of the others to enjoy Legends — and my daughter hadn't. Though it makes for a better watch. One mom-daughter pair in our crew saw the original the night before, and the tween yelled 'Johnny!' in delight during the mid-credits scene. My kid had no idea who Johnny (William Zabka) was. (He's come a long way, baby.) This installment of the martial arts franchise, which I enjoyed while sipping a Ruby Red Kicker (a mocktail with ruby red grapefruit, cream of coconut, agave and lime), sees Macchio (Daniel in the first three movies as well as in Cobra Kai) and Jackie Chan (Mr. Han in 2010's The Karate Kid with Jaden Smith) reprising their roles as they come together to help Li Fong (Ben Wang) best his bully rival in the 5 Boroughs Tournament. Li, who is Han's great-nephew, studied kung fu in Beijing before moving to New York City. However, his brother was fatally stabbed during a dispute they had with a kung fu opponent after a tournament. Li is haunted by that — and so is his mother, played by Ming-Na Wen, who doesn't want him to practice kung fu anymore. And what's a Karate Kid movie without a love story? Li meets Mia (Sadie Stanley) — daughter of Joshua Jackson's Victor, a former boxer turned pizza shop owner who owes money to the wrong guys — and their PG relationship sparks trouble with her ex, karate champ Conor (Aramis Knight). Legends takes place three years after Cobra Kai's series finale. It includes nods to its history, starting early on with a throwback scene of Daniel and Mr. Miyagi (the late Pat Morita) from Karate Kid II. It led to the explanation of the deep connection between Miyagi and Han. Han also visits Daniel at Miyagi-Do dojo in California, with the iconic yellow convertible parked outside, to convince him to come to New York to train Li. But there's lots of forward momentum to the story, down to the crane kick being replaced by the acrobatic, spinning dragon kick. While the film may be lagging in box office expectations, the room of moviegoers I was with clapped at the end — and I can't remember the last time that happened. Our young film enthusiasts again liked the funny parts: They laughed as masters Daniel and Han squabbled over which of their martial arts styles was better while training Li. ('What happened to two branches, one tree?' Li asked. 'One branch stronger than the other,' Han replied.) They cracked up when Johnny brainstormed Miyagi-Dough pizza ideas with an exasperated Daniel. ('Olives on, olives off' was the funniest thing to the kids, despite none of them ever even trying one.) They also liked Li's tutor turned friend Alan (Wyatt Oleff) with his comedic relief. While nobody needed comfort during the movie, the eldest girl in our group told me the PG-13 rated film was the 'most violent' and 'intense' movie she had ever seen. Moments included Jackson's character being knocked unconscious and hospitalized as well as a recurring flashback of Li's brother's death. 'I don't hate Karate Kid, but I don't love it because I'm afraid of violence,' she said. (The same kid also danced excitedly through the closing credits, so it was a range of feelings.) My own child felt 'on guard the whole time,' telling me, 'I liked it, but it was not a relaxing movie. Everyone was jumping around. Fighting. The drama. The violence. The emotions. And it was so sad that Li's brother died.' The adults lapped up all the nostalgic elements. Before we even got in the theater, we had gone from talking about Macchio in Karate Kid to 10 minutes on The Outsiders, which came in 1983, also featuring Macchio, and had the cast of the century. It was all: 'I loved Johnny.' 'I loved Ponyboy.' 'Oh, Matt Dillon.' 'Ah, Rob Lowe.' 'Tom Cruise got so much better looking after that movie.' 'Emilio Estevez was my favorite.' Speaking of teen heartthrobs, during Legends, I was amused when, after Jackson had already appeared onscreen several times, my friend leaned over and said, 'Ohhh my gosh, it's PACEY!' just realizing the Dawson's Creek alum was playing a middle-aged movie dad. Someone has clearly not been watching Doctor Odyssey. Jackson was a nice addition to the film, and his pizza shop training with Li was a fun callback to Daniel and Miyagi of old, but then his character practically disappeared toward the end, even after all the training he did for the role. The team behind Legends wasn't trying to reinvent the wheel here. While there were new faces and impressive martial arts moves, the story played out in a similar way to past films, with a big tournament finale as a defining moment. In this one, Li bested Conor to win, and while he celebrated his winning moment, Conor came at him. Li not only stopped him, again, but then showed him mercy by not punching him when he could have. Li actually extended a hand to his rival. It reminded me why I liked the franchise in the first place, and it was a good lesson for the kids. There are so many movies the kids want to see this summer (shortlist: Elio, How to Train Your Dragon, The Bad Guys 2, Smurfs), yet we were served a trailer for R-rated Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight followed by a Blair Underwood Lexus commercial. It was definitely not a preview to remember. 'We went home and googled the ages of Pat Morita when the first Karate Kid came out (52) and Ralph Macchio in the current one (63),' my friend wrote. For the last few days, I've been stuck on the fact that Daniel is now older than Mr. Miyagi. Rule No. 1: Karate is for defense only. Rule No. 2: Googling your teen crush's current age as an adult is instant regret.

All the drama ahead on the 3rd and final season of 'Squid Game'
All the drama ahead on the 3rd and final season of 'Squid Game'

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

All the drama ahead on the 3rd and final season of 'Squid Game'

Are you ready to get back in the game? The third season of Squid Game is headed to Netflix on June 27 — the final installment of the South Korean television phenomenon. The series, which follows down-on-his-luck Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) as he seeks to win a brutal game with a major monetary prize, is a critique of capitalism and the ever-widening wealth gap — but it's also a thriller with endless jaw-dropping reveals and twists. (Spoilers ahead!) With the last piece of the puzzle soon to be unveiled, here's what you need to know about Squid Game. Netflix is dropping all episodes of Squid Game's third season on June 27 — a very fast turnaround from its last season, which hit the platform on Dec. 26, 2024. Meanwhile, the gap between the first and second season of Squid Game was more than three years, with the first season debuting on Sept. 17, 2021. The show's creator, Hwang Dong-hyuk, previously told Entertainment Weekly that Seasons 2 and 3 are actually one continuous story but were split into two seasons because of the number of episodes — which is also why the third season is arriving sooner than expected. The first season of Squid Game saw Gi-hun entering the last-man-standing competition, in which the wealthy watch as poor players battle it out in a variety of deadly challenges for a shot at a life-changing cash prize — 456 billion won, which is around $33 million. Gi-hun wins but is forever changed by the cruelty and violence he experienced. He's hellbent on destroying the game — even if that means returning to the arena. In Season 2, Gi-hun reenters the Squid Game in order to take it down from the inside — which, of course, was always going to be easier said than done. Instead of convincing his fellow participants to walk away from the game, or successfully taking down the game makers with his rebellion, the second season ends with Gi-hun having lost nearly everything. His allies are dead, including his best friend, Jung-bae (Lee Seo-hwan), who was killed by the Front Man (Lee Byung-hun). According to Netflix, the cast of Squid Game Season 3 includes: Lee Jung-jae as Gi-hun/Player 456 Lee Byung-hun as Front Man Wi Ha-jun as Hwang Jun-ho Yim Si-wan as Myung-gi/Player 333 Kang Ha-neul as Dae-ho/Player 388 Park Sung-hoon as Hyun-ju/Player 120 Yang Dong-geun as Yong-sik/Player 007 Kang Ae-sim as Geum-ja/Player 149 Jo Yuri as Jun-hee/Player 222 Lee David as Min-su/Player 125 Roh Jae-won as Nam-gyu/Player 124 Park Gyu-young as No-eul The third season of Squid Game brings us back to the same game played in Season 2 — but despite staging a failed rebellion, Gi-hun is not out of the woods yet. As the teaser shows, Gi-hun is brought back into the game in a coffin and forced to play a series of new childhood games with a violent twist. Those games include a very dangerous round of jump rope and a maze experience that quickly descends into violence. Naturally, the scenes have a disturbing playful aesthetic that hides their true nature. In a letter to fans, Dong-hyuk wrote, 'Seong Gi-hun who vowed revenge at the end of Season 1 returns and joins the game again. Will he succeed in getting his revenge? Front Man doesn't seem to be an easy opponent this time either. The fierce clash between their two worlds will continue into the series finale with Season 3.' The creator isn't totally ruling out more Squid Game. Dong-hyuk told IndieWire earlier this month that he already has a potential plan. "I have an idea," he said. "Our next spin-off will be a story happening between Season 1 and 2. There was like a three-year gap between Season 1 and 2, so I will show what they did for those times." If you're eagerly anticipating more Squid Game, you can check out Netflix's reality show Squid Game: The Challenge, a game show based on the TV series. The show has 456 contestants compete in challenges inspired by the South Korean drama for a cash prize of $4.56 million. (Obviously, no contestants are killed — just kicked off.) And if that's not enough, Netflix also has Squid Game: The Experience, a tourist attraction currently in New York City in which you can compete, too. Unfortunately, there's no cash prize in this one.

Patrick Schwarzenegger talks about the ‘baggage' of having famous parents. Why he's set on making a name for himself.
Patrick Schwarzenegger talks about the ‘baggage' of having famous parents. Why he's set on making a name for himself.

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Patrick Schwarzenegger talks about the ‘baggage' of having famous parents. Why he's set on making a name for himself.

Patrick Schwarzenegger is done with claims that he's a nepo baby. Instead of fighting the label, he's reluctantly come to accept it — but on his own terms. While chatting with his movie star father, Arnold Schwarzenegger, for Variety's "Actors on Actors" interview published on Tuesday, Patrick discussed the challenges of being seen as an actor in his own right. Patrick's mother, Maria Shriver, is a journalist and member of the Shriver and Kennedy families. The 31-year-old actor garnered acclaim for his portrayal of Saxon Ratliff, a narcissistic finance bro turned introspective sad boy, on Season 3 of The White Lotus. The anthology series, written and created by Mike White, is a social satire built around the guests and employees at a luxury resort. 'Mike White said that it comes with baggage, the idea that when you have successful parents like I do with you and mom, there's an added level of what other people think. Mike was worried about, if he cast me, what other people would think,' Patrick told Arnold of carrying the Schwarzenegger name. 'Which they did — they did care about that; people said that I got the role because of you and mom.' Patrick had contemplated dropping the Schwarzenegger name altogether. 'There were times earlier in my career where I was wondering, does it make sense to go under some sort of alias?' he said. 'It took a while for me to get to a point where I was less worried about, like, comparison and living in your shadow versus me just wanting to carve my own path and wanting to do it the way I thought I should do it.' Arnold told his son, 'You have never asked me to call a studio or to call an agent. You never asked me for advice when it comes to acting itself. You're a rare breed, and I'm very, very proud of you.' This isn't the first time Patrick has discussed the pitfalls of coming from a famous family. For his February 2025 cover story with the Sunday Times, the actor spoke candidly of the 'blessings and curses' of having such a recognizable surname, and how the nepo baby label minimizes the work he put into securing the role of Saxon on The White Lotus. 'I know there are people who'll say I only got this role because of who my dad is,' he said. 'They're not seeing that I've had 10 years of acting classes, put on [high] school plays every week, worked on my characters for hours on end or the hundreds of rejected auditions I've been on.' Patrick admits to having moments where he wishes he weren't a Schwarzenegger. Those moments are fleeting though. 'I would never trade my life with anyone," he told the Sunday Times. "I'm very fortunate to have the life and the family that I have, the parents I have and the lessons and values they've instilled in me.' Born and raised in Los Angeles, Patrick's earlier acting credits include Stuck in Love, the love interest in Ariana Grande's 2013 music video for 'Right There,' Scream Queens, Moxie and Gen V. The actor's pushback against claims that he's a nepo baby — even after talking in the "Actors on Actors" segment about why he doesn't think he is — has generated controversy online. On X, many users criticized Patrick's comments, calling him a nepo baby who refuses to acknowledge it. Others, including his White Lotus costar Aimee Lou Wood, with whom he recently reunited, have been quick to come to his defense. 'Patrick Schwarzenegger says it's 'frustrating' that 'there are people who'll say I only got ['THE WHITE LOTUS'] role because of who my dad is.' … And then bringing his dad along on his Emmy campaign,' one X user wrote, while another said, 'I don't know how to explain it, but Patrick Schwarzenegger has the most pure energy. Just golden retriever, happy to be here, the most un-nepo baby to ever nepo baby.' Wood, meanwhile, called Patrick the 'hardest working and kindest man ever' in an Instagram Story in May that she posted alongside a clip of him speaking about how it feels to be told he only got his White Lotus role 'cause his dad's in the industry.' Other children of celebrities and prominent figures who've been dubbed nepo babies have chosen to chart a course different from Patrick's: They've parted ways with their famous last names. While chatting with Kate Hudson and her brother Oliver on their podcast, "Sibling Revelry," former first lady Michelle Obama spoke about how her daughters Malia, 26, and Sasha, 23, with former President Barack Obama, 'don't want people to assume they don't work hard' or 'that they were handed things.' Malia, according to Michelle, goes by Malia Ann, her first and middle names. The 26-year-old filmmaker decided to drop her famous moniker from the short film she debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2024. Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's daughter, Shiloh Jolie, 19, debuted her new nickname, 'Shi' last month. The change comes a year after she petitioned to drop her father's surname. Vivienne, 16, another one of Jolie and Pitt's daughters, followed in her older sister's steps. She worked as a producer's assistant for The Outsiders, and her name was listed as 'Vivienne Jolie' in the Playbill. Nepo babies are celebrating their famous parents with the 'Holy Airball' trend on TikTok in which famous or wealthy teens and 20-somethings share an incorrect assumption or expectation made of them, followed by a humblebrag about how successful they actually are. The name of the trend is a reference to basketball, when a player egregiously misses scoring a basket. While many celebrity children are embracing their nepo baby status, others are reluctant. As Patrick demonstrates, there isn't a one-size-fits-all solution to navigating life as a celebrity offspring.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store