Netflix has stepped into the comic book superhero adaptation arena a number of times over the years, mostly in the form of TV shows like Jessica Jones, Daredevil, Luke Cage, and so on. An interesting pattern in these shows is that they tend to run like a long-form movie, often lacking episode-specific structure in favor of the binge-model assumption that you’ll gobble up the episodes quite quickly.
So I was surprised to find that The Old Guard, a Netflix film adaptation of the comic by the same name from Greg Rucka (who also penned the film’s script) and Leandro Fernandez, felt like the opposite: like a longer-form TV show condensed into the confines of a movie.
The Old Guard stars Charlize Theron as the leader of an immortal group of mercenaries. Though they aren’t quite immortal – their immortality can randomly dry up at any time, and one of them has died in the past – they’ve lived for hundreds of years. For the first time in 200 years, though, they sense the presence of a new immortal, Nile (KiKi Layne), a U.S. marine killed in duty only to be immediately resurrected by her innate powers. While they search for Nile, they’re also being hunted down by scientists and entrepreneurs (Chiwetel Ejiofor and Harry Melling), who want to harness their immortality for the better of humanity (or the potential profits it will result in).
As you might guess by my feels-like-a-TV-show comment, The Old Guard is an incredibly interesting concept with a solid core of actors behind it, but it suffers from serious script and pacing issues. For the first 30 minutes or so I was hooked on the world building and lore surrounding this group of immortals. Director Gina Prince-Bythewood clearly has a good command of the film in its quieter and more character-based or introspective moments, and Theron, Layne, and everyone in the cast is doing their best to sell the material. I was also particularly fond of new-to-me actors Marwan Kenzari and Luca Marinelli, two members of the immortal group who’ve been in the longest of long-term relationship. Unfortunately, the script only scratches the surface of the interesting dynamic of a hundreds-of-years-old partnership.
After that first 30 minutes, The Old Guard start to lose steam quickly. The character development fades to the background in favor of short bursts of repetitive action, running, action, and so on. Because of that pacing I felt fatigued and felt every minute of the film’s 2 hours (not particularly long, even, by today’s standards) once we’d moved past the opening 30 minutes. This is a shame, because the film really garnered my interest in the source material. But my interest in who these people are and where they’ve been up to this point was largely lost as the film went on and focused on more straight forward action/espionage story beats, most of which felt fairly contrived or unconvincing (the villain and his motivations, in particular, fell flat).
The Old Guard had a lot of potential to be something special as a longer-form, character-based form of storytelling, with an intriguing core concept and stellar cast. But as a standalone action flick, it’s pace and storytelling is less than satisfying.