Compensating for its formulaic plot with a whole lotta violent action, Havoc is a sufficiently entertaining bloodbath. This is essentially an 80’s b-tier action movie with a shiny modern coat of paint, and despite its shortcomings, it emerges as a passably fun watch. Nearly character in this story is a different level of corrupt. Dirty cops, dirty politicians, gang members, drug dealers - they’re all involved in shady business at varying levels. Tom Hardy’s character is among the least corrupt (but still a little corrupt to keep things interesting), so that makes him the protagonist by default. He plays a detective in the back pocket of a powerful politician, sent to do one last job before he can get out and live a clean life. Sound familiar? That’s because we’ve seen variations on this trope a million times before. It’s a tired story beat that does this movie no favours in the originality department. Hardy is reliably entertaining in the role, with some surprisingly great ...
Havoc begins as a mixed bag, with a Tom Hardy character who never quite changes and feels like the same stoic, hungry for danger/pain hero he’s played before. The story and its setup also feels somewhat convoluted and surrounded by characters who aren’t that gripping. However, after the first act, the action sequences become so complex and outrageous in their choreography, editing, and stunts, that they elevate the entire movie, including Hardy’s presence in it. The crime lord villains feel like caricatures, and Forest Whitaker’s performance is too over-the-top with hollow writing. Jessie Mei Li plays a great partner to Hardy’s cop, as is Timothy Olyphant as a more seasoned cop rivaling Hardy’s character. Two fight scenes, one in a nightclub and one in/outside a cabin, are so intricate, bloody, and exaggerated, and escalate so shockingly they’ll make your jaw drop and forgive many of the film’s shortcomings. However, that does take getting past a generic beginning (and blan...