Reviews

The Suicide Squad (2021) – Review

Second Time’s the Charm

ATTEMPTING to revive the toxic Suicide Squad (2016) brand, director James Gunn blends the kinetic energy of Guardians of the Galaxy (also directed by Gunn) and the R-rated violence and humor of Deadpool to create The Suicide Squad (2021) (emphasis on The). Within the opening scenes it becomes apparent that this latest attempt at bringing together DC Comic’s Z-list villains is of higher quality than its 2016 counterpart, with a much better understanding of what makes the source material work, but that is not exactly a high bar.

The Suicide Squad (2021) primarily follows six of DC’s… lesser known villains, brought together by the government’s formidable Amanda Waller (Viola Davis). Their mission, with no option to reject it, is to journey to the inhospitable island of Corto Maltese and sabotage the secretive scientific experiments taking place there. Bloodsport (Idris Elba), Peacemaker (John Cena), King Shark (voiced by Steve Agee), Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), Ratcatcher 2 (Daniela Melchior), and Polka-Dot Man (David Dastmalchian) find themselves kept (sort of) in line by Col. Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman). While the marketing material may showcase a slew of other fun and quirky characters, the film’s title should give you a hint of how that goes.

For the most part everyone fills their designated ensemble role quite well. Idris Elba serves as the stable patriarch figure of the group. John Cena delights as the deranged protector of peace, willing to kill as many women and children as it takes to uphold it. Margot Robbie slides right back into her fantastic portrayal of Harley Quinn, only faltering when the script lets her down (more on that later). Rounding out the baddies, Daniela Melchior provides a serviceable emotional through line for the team and David Dastmalchian is the celebrated new addition. Polka-Dot Man’s depressed sense of humor and unexpected running gag make him the easy standout. The only character that falls apart is Viola Davis’ Amanda Waller. Just like in the last iteration, she comes off as a frustrating bureaucrat instead of a towering threat. This time the film itself even undercuts her presence when the plot demands it.

One of the large improvements previously referenced is that this version of The Squad dives right into the action. It quickly moves past all of the stage setting the 2016 version has to deal with. With no time wasted, our characters are on a beach ready to kill in the most gruesome and entertaining of ways. However, this insistence on jumping right into things is a double-edged sword. By spending so little time on setting up the cast before throwing them into the fray, the film lacks emotional and dramatic weight. At times it is as if a child has grabbed all of his or her action figures and smashed them together, declaring it a battle of epic proportions. The results are undoubtedly entertaining, but hallow nonetheless. The Suicide Squad (2021) tries its best to feed the audience reasons to care about a number of its characters as it goes on, but these sequences are too little, too late.

The next and most important improvement (that guess what, is another double-edged sword), is Gunn’s sense of humor. Whether it’s hitting or missing Gunn swings for the fences every time. An impressive kill-off between Bloodsport and Peacemaker left my theater in stitches. Harley Quinn also delivers some terrific laughs when the film embraces her psychosis and has her fall in love with Corto Maltese’s Presidente General, Silvio Luna (Juan Diego Botto… noted Nick Wright look-alike). She also serves the biggest groans, with poop and 69 jokes headlining. Additionally, some squad members with less spotlight, like King Shark, quickly have their tropes worn out. Although the R-rating lets the film flex with entertaining physical and violence-based comedy, it is hard to walk away from The Suicide Squad (2021) not thinking that PG-13 ratings have previously forced Gunn to be more creative with his writing.

Focusing in on the filmmaking itself, the island setting proves a bit dull. Moving from generic location to generic location results in a visually bland affair. The film does give Harley one colorfully stylized battle (highlighted in the trailers), and it’s probably the most impressive of the bunch. Another scene worth mentioning is a fight that starts off in the reflection of a certain polished helmet. I only wish the film had the confidence to let the shot linger a smidge longer. The soundtrack is also typical upbeat Gunn, but nothing as noteworthy as Guardians of the Galaxy’s.

The Suicide Squad (2021) accomplishes what it sets out to do. It hits the tone of the source material much more faithfully than the first adaptation (by actually providing a plausible reason for villains to make up the team, even though it still redeems our baddies a bit too much at the end) and it more than successfully revitalizes the brand for DC Films by injecting the lovably evil squad with James Gunn’s trademark energy and humor. Unfortunately, it injects so much of both that the film cannot always sustain itself.

6
Okay

The Suicide Squad (2021)

The Suicide Squad (2021) succeeds where the 2016 adaptation fails. Director James Gunn uses his talents to inject the film with his trademark comedic style. Over-the-top violence and physical comedy carry The Suicide Squad (2021) far, but sometimes too far. Poor writing creeps in with lazy crude humor, and due to the dedication to non-stop action the film often feels hallow. Regardless, it is a solid experience and is worth watching for Polka-Dot Man alone.

Pros

  • Over-the-top physical/violence-based comedy
  • Everything about Polka-Dot Man
  • John Cena and Margot Robbie's performances
  • A good understanding of the source material

Cons

  • Lazily written crude humor
  • Disposable and emotionally weightless characters
  • Visually dull for the most part
  • Amanda Waller still doesn't quite work
Christian Riffle is the creator of MovieRiffing as well as its main contributor. From filming The Best Yu-Gi-Oh Duel You Shall Ever See in the bathroom at age ten, to producing skits and news shows with friends, Christian has always loved creating, with an emphasis on editing. This love for making his own movies naturally led to a love for watching them. One of his earliest film memories is being traumatized by the pigs in Spirited Away.

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