
Taken 2
2012 · Directed by Olivier Megaton
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Ultra Based
Critics rated this 41 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1270 of 1469.
Representation Casting
Score: 12/100
The cast includes female actors (Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen) and international performers, but they occupy traditional supporting and victim roles with no indication of progressive casting decisions.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
No LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or representation present in the film.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 8/100
Female characters exist in the narrative but are primarily positioned as victims requiring rescue rather than agents driving the plot. No feminist messaging or thematic content.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 5/100
The film features international settings and non-white antagonists, but treats them as generic threats without cultural specificity or meaningful engagement with race or ethnicity.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
No climate themes, environmental messaging, or climate-related plot elements present.
Eat the Rich
Score: 0/100
The protagonist is a CIA operative working within state power structures; the film reinforces rather than challenges capitalist and imperial systems.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
No body positivity themes, diverse body representation, or commentary on physical appearance standards present.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No neurodivergent characters, representation, or thematic engagement with neurodivergence.
Revisionist History
Score: 0/100
The film contains no historical revisionism or reexamination of historical narratives.
Lecture Energy
Score: 2/100
The film is action-focused and contains minimal dialogue or thematic exposition, though some exposition about the plot's mechanics is necessary.
Synopsis
In Istanbul, retired CIA operative Bryan Mills and his wife are taken hostage by the father of a kidnapper Mills killed while rescuing his daughter.
Consciousness Assessment
Taken 2 represents the sort of action sequel that exists in a vacuum, hermetically sealed from any consideration of social consciousness whatsoever. Bryan Mills is called back into service when his wife is kidnapped in Istanbul by a grieving father seeking vengeance. The film concerns itself entirely with the mechanics of violent rescue, presenting a world where geopolitical tensions are resolved through gunfire and the unshakeable competence of a white male protagonist. There is no interrogation of American interventionism, no meaningful examination of the collateral damage left in the original film's wake, and no cultural awareness regarding the film's setting or its antagonists.
The female characters exist primarily as objects requiring rescue or as passive observers of male action. Maggie Grace's Kim contributes little beyond her capacity to be in danger, while Famke Janssen's Lenore is similarly positioned as a wife in peril rather than an agent in her own narrative. The Albanian and Eastern European villains are presented as faceless threats, their motivations reduced to simple revenge without any attempt at nuance or cultural specificity. This is action filmmaking at its most incurious and commercially straightforward.
The film's modest progressive content comes only from the basic fact that it includes female actors in its cast, which was already standard practice in mainstream action cinema by 2012. There is no evident engagement with contemporary social consciousness, no thematic complexity regarding gender or representation, and no cultural commentary whatsoever. It is a film made for audiences who seek pure spectacle divorced from any engagement with the world beyond its action sequences.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“The cast is uniformly capable and dead serious, and if you're buying what Luc Besson is selling, he's not short-changing you. ”
“Taken 2 is like a textbook on how to make beautiful, successful and highly satisfying junk-food cinema. When it's just a plot point, the information gets tossed out as fast and as forcefully as possible. Time is lavished only on the things that matter. ”
“The director of this jamboree is appropriately named Olivier Megaton. ”
“A cynical film which has only been made, apparently, to squeeze the pockets of anyone who enjoyed the first movie. Why give them the satisfaction? ”
Consciousness Markers
The cast includes female actors (Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen) and international performers, but they occupy traditional supporting and victim roles with no indication of progressive casting decisions.
No LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or representation present in the film.
Female characters exist in the narrative but are primarily positioned as victims requiring rescue rather than agents driving the plot. No feminist messaging or thematic content.
The film features international settings and non-white antagonists, but treats them as generic threats without cultural specificity or meaningful engagement with race or ethnicity.
No climate themes, environmental messaging, or climate-related plot elements present.
The protagonist is a CIA operative working within state power structures; the film reinforces rather than challenges capitalist and imperial systems.
No body positivity themes, diverse body representation, or commentary on physical appearance standards present.
No neurodivergent characters, representation, or thematic engagement with neurodivergence.
The film contains no historical revisionism or reexamination of historical narratives.
The film is action-focused and contains minimal dialogue or thematic exposition, though some exposition about the plot's mechanics is necessary.