American Ultra
- Director: Nima Nourizadeh
- Writer: Max Landis
- Producer: David Alpert; Ray Angelic
CGiii Comment
One-dimensional Jesse attempts a two-dimensional character...and fails, miserably.
To be fair, it's not all his fault...both director and writer have to be accountable for this genre-confused muddle.
Stoner, action, conspiracy, rom-com...call it what you will...it's a high-octane, severely unfunny, expensive mess.
There's a gay character...the only reason we know he's gay...a brief glimpse of his cell phone showing a picture of him, the other him and their dog...aaaw...and, for that reason GLAAD decided to give it a mention...as a positive depiction of a gay man.
You really can't make this crap up...but, GLAAD and this film do...with worrying aplomb.
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
Small-town stoner Mike Howell (Jesse Eisenberg) spends most of his time getting high and writing a graphic novel about a superhero monkey. What Mike doesn't know is that he was trained by the CIA to be a lethal killing machine. When the agency targets him for termination, his former handler activates his latent skills, turning the mild-mannered slacker into a deadly weapon. Now, the utterly surprised Mike must use his newfound abilities to save himself and his girlfriend from getting wasted.
Interestingly, the stoner-spy thriller American Ultra positioned a gay CIA agent as the film’s moral center. In a genre that often only includes LGBT characters as villains or one-note stereotypes, it’s refreshing to see a gay character given substance and the same type of humanizing traits as non-LGBT characters. Agent Petey Douglas breaks protocol to provide his former boss with weapons to protect herself and sleeper agent Mike, and later disregards direct orders, which would have resulted in many civilian deaths and reports the situation to superiors. Petey’s orientation is established very organically as just part of his life; he receives a text message with a picture of his partner and their dog asking when he is coming home and saying they miss him. In a workplace-set film that could easily have left out any hint of a personal life, it is notable that the creators made the choice to include an LGBT character as part of the film’s world.
The phrase...get a life...comes to mind. No mention of the violence, deception, corruption...ad nauseam. All is well...it's got a decent poof in it!
Cast & Characters
Jesse Eisenberg as Mike Howell;
Kristen Stewart as Phoebe Larson;
Topher Grace as Adrian Yates;
Connie Britton as Victoria Lasseter;
Walton Goggins as Laugher;
John Leguizamo as Rose;
Bill Pullman as Krueger;
Tony Hale as Petey Douglas;
Stuart Greer as Sheriff Watts;
Michael Papajohn as Otis;
Monique Ganderton as Crane;
Nash Edgerton as Beedle;
Paul Andrew O'Connor as Diesel;
Freddie Poole as Potter;
Ilram Choi as Newton