London Has Fallen is a distinct improvement over Olympus Has Fallen, making it a 1st-rate action movie. The sequel improves the original by having a plausible villain, albeit amidst an equally implausible story. Throw in several well-earned laughs – amid the carnage – and you’ve got a helluva fun big-screen movie.
Speaking of the original, Olympus (aka the White House) looks all shiny and new early in Has Fallen II. They’ve rebuilt the White House, I thought. Now it’s London’s turn, teeing up a spectacular disaster movie. Basically, a terrorist Godzilla hits Big Ben, Westminster Abbey and St Pauls. A stiff upper lip is required.
Mike Banning – great character name – hits back. Gerard Butler reaches a career peak as Banning, former Special Forces, now POTUS’s bodyguard. Buff as Butler’s ever going to get, Banning credibly kicks ass, no matter how many murderous bastards come against him. Gerry Butler can bank Has Fallen III now.
Olympus Has Fallen barely won the Decapitating America in 2013 sweepstakes. Now it’s found its footing. So which capital is next – Paris, Rome, Tokyo, Riyadh? The mind reels, but the world is this series’ oyster.
“Marine Two, assume sacrifice position” elevates London Has Fallen into something noble.
Several death-defying bon mots give the film comic pace, not to mention some LOLs.
Seriously Sordid. Seriously.
3x CircoReality • 2x PhysioReality • 3x BioReality = 2.7x Overall Reality, aka Strongly Surreal
Amazingly, London Has Fallen grades out as slightly less surreal than Olympus Has Fallen.
Movie reality aside: