| 
		 Angel Has Fallen (7/10) 
		by Tony Medley 
		Runtime 120 minutes.  
		R.  
		The first one in this series, 
		Olympus Has Fallen  (2013) was pretty good, notable mainly for its 
		score by Trevor Morris and a fine supporting performance by Radha 
		Mitchell. The second, London Has Fallen 
		 (2016), was a 
		formulaic idiocy, maybe because Antoine Fuqua, who knows about 
		action, was replaced as director by Babak Najafi.  
		For this one they have dumped 
		some of the mainstays of the first two. The outstanding Mitchell is no 
		longer the wife of Mike Banning (Gerard Butler, who spent five years 
		preparing to be a lawyer/solicitor in Scotland; when he had the good 
		fortune to be told after all that time that he wasn't going to make the 
		grade, despite having been President of the Law Society at Glasgow 
		University, he made the wise decision to become an actor), being replaced by Piper Perabo, and Morris was dumped for David Buckley to write the score, and 
		that’s a small minus because the score is a huge part of a good chase film 
		and Morris is very good. 
		But the new director for this 
		third film, Ric Roman Waugh, is clearly better for this film series than either of the first 
		two as he has put together a highly entertaining chase film. As with the 
		others, Banning is in almost every scene as a Secret Service agent 
		guarding the President, Alan Turnbull (Morgan Freeman). Don’t go see 
		this for Freeman’s performance, though, because he spends most of the 
		film in a coma. 
		He got that way because of a 
		drone attack on the President which is blamed on Mike. In an interview 
		Butler jokingly said that he was disappointed that his character fell from grace so 
		fast. So all the world is after Mike and they are chasing him throughout 
		the entire movie. 
		Butler gives a good performance, 
		but so does Danny Huston (currently seen in Paramount Network's 
		Yellowstone) as Mike’s longtime friend, Wade Jennings. However, the best performance in 
		the movie is by Nick Nolte as Mike’s outcast father. Maybe Nick will 
		finally get some notice and award fanfare because he deserves it for 
		this role. 
		
		This is 
		better than its precursors. While this might be damning with faint 
		praise, despite the absurd gun battles, which unfortunately seem de 
		rigueur for this genre, this is an entertaining chase film until the 
		puerile ending. 
		  |