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The Expendables

2010 · Directed by Sylvester Stallone

🧘4

Woke Score

45

Critic

🍿64

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 41 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1268 of 1469.

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Synopsis

Barney Ross leads a band of highly skilled mercenaries including knife enthusiast Lee Christmas, a martial arts expert Yin Yang, heavy weapons specialist Hale Caesar, demolitionist Toll Road, and a loose-cannon sniper Gunner Jensen. When the group is commissioned by the mysterious Mr. Church to assassinate the dictator of a small South American island, Barney and Lee visit the remote locale to scout out their opposition and discover the true nature of the conflict engulfing the city.

Consciousness Assessment

The Expendables arrives as a monument to an older order, a film so deliberately committed to the action cinema of the 1980s and early 90s that it feels almost archaeological in its devotion to that era's aesthetics and sensibilities. Director and star Sylvester Stallone has assembled a roster of aging action heroes not to interrogate masculinity or examine the nature of violence, but to celebrate both with the reverence of a curator preserving artifacts in amber. The film asks nothing of its audience except to appreciate the presence of its cast and the competence of its set pieces. It is, in this sense, a film of remarkable purity, untouched by any impulse toward self-reflection.

The cast composition is notable primarily for its homogeneity. While Jet Li appears as a martial artist and Giselle Itié plays a minor supporting role, the film makes no apparent effort to examine or interrogate representation. The female presence is minimal and decorative. The narrative concerns itself entirely with the operations of a mercenary team, their codes, their loyalties, and their aging bodies still capable of violence. There is no moment where the film pauses to consider the ethics of its premise or the implications of its plot, which involves the overthrow of a Latin American government. These elements simply exist as backdrop.

The Expendables exists in a space where entertainment and politics can remain entirely separate concerns. It is pure genre exercise, unmarked by irony, untouched by progressive sensibility, and seemingly unburdened by any awareness that such sensibilities might exist at all. In this regard, it achieves a kind of innocence that later films, regardless of their politics, could never reclaim.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

45%from 35 reviews
Entertainment Weekly75

The way that Stallone directs, though, every machete thrust and relentless round of bullet spray is staged with a certain undeniable...conviction.

Owen GleibermanRead Full Review →
The A.V. Club75

Delivers pretty much exactly what its audience wants and expects: big, dumb, campy fun so deliriously, comically macho, it's remarkable that no one in the cast died of testosterone poisoning.

Nathan RabinRead Full Review →
Boston Globe75

Expendables is the closest thing to movie Viagra yet invented. It's reprehensible. It's stoopid violent. It's a lot of unholy fun.

The New Yorker10

The Expendables is savage yet inert, and breathtakingly sleazy in its lack of imagination.

Anthony LaneRead Full Review →