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The Killer

2023 · Directed by David Fincher

🧘4

Woke Score

82

Critic

🍿72

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 78 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #309 of 1469.

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Synopsis

After a fateful miss, an assassin battles his employers, and himself, on an international manhunt he insists isn't personal.

Consciousness Assessment

The Killer is a restrained, methodical thriller that follows an assassin confronting the consequences of a missed target. The film is quintessentially Fincher in its studied detachment and formal precision, presenting a protagonist who operates in a morally void universe where professional competence is the only virtue. The narrative offers nothing resembling contemporary social consciousness. The story centers on a male killer's internal conflict and external manhunt, with no particular attention paid to identity politics or modern cultural anxieties.

The cast, while featuring respected actors like Tilda Swinton and Michael Fassbender, includes them as functional characters in a plot rather than as vehicles for exploring diverse perspectives. Swinton's role, though substantial, does not constitute representation in any meaningful sense related to progressive casting initiatives. The film maintains Fincher's characteristic emotional coldness and narrative focus on procedural violence. There are no LGBTQ+ themes, no climate consciousness, no body positivity messaging, and no revisionist historical claims.

The overall effect is one of artistic indifference toward the cultural preoccupations of the 2020s. This is a thriller made by a consummate craftsman who remains uninterested in social commentary. It is precisely the sort of film that would have been made in 1995, updated only with modern production technology and streaming distribution. The lecture energy is nonexistent. The politics are absent.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

82%from 20 reviews
Empire100

John Woo's trademark style reached its zenith in The Killer, with its ying-yang relationship between a good-hearted hit man and an anti-authority cop. But underneath the Miami Vice tailoring, it's as much a doomed romance as a shoot-'em-up.

Alan MorrisonRead Full Review →
TV Guide Magazine100

For Western viewers unfamiliar with Hong Kong gangster films, there's no better introduction.

Staff (Not Credited)Read Full Review →
Variety100

This extremely violent and superbly made actioner demonstrates the tight grasp that director John Woo has on the crime meller genre, and his ability to twist the form into surprisingly satisfying shapes. The picture creeps up on an audience. Melodramatic from the start, it finally goes over the top to deliver a solid emotional punch.

Staff (Not Credited)Read Full Review →
St. Louis Post-Dispatch38

Ordinarily, one decries the violence in the streets, in life or art - or rationalizes that violence on the screen is a healthy outlet for man's inhumanity to man. But there's no such highfalutin psychology in The Killer. The film is just plain outlandish - and anyone who doesn't get the hyberbole should have a 99-year lease on The Farm for the Bewildered. [16 Aug 1991, p.3F]

Martha BakerRead Full Review →