logo
#

Latest news with #WaterCobra

‘Heads of State' review: Action film plays to its stars' strengths
‘Heads of State' review: Action film plays to its stars' strengths

Mint

time06-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Mint

‘Heads of State' review: Action film plays to its stars' strengths

Heads of State is exactly what it promises: a fast-paced, action-packed buddy comedy that leans into its absurdity with style, big laughs and big action set pieces. Ilya Naishuller directs a script by Harrison Query, John Applebaum and Andre Nemec, which clearly understands the assignment—pair two mismatched but magnetic leads, toss them into a high-stakes international mess, and let the chemistry and chaos unfold. John Cena and Idris Elba headline the action-comedy as two political powerhouses. Cena plays Will Derringer, a former action movie star whose latest job is as President of the United States, while Idris Elba plays Sam Clarke, the current Prime Minister of the UK. The latter's calm, calculating exterior hides a former life in the British special armed forces, whereas Derringer relies on his celebrity to skate through his tenure. When a diplomatic visit to England almost goes off the rails (over a plate of fish and chips, among things), a little diplomatic engineering provides the perfect photo-op to change the narrative surrounding their public discord. Derringer and Clarke travel on Air Force One together, but things go sideways while they are en route to a NATO meeting in Italy. When their plane gets compromised, the sparring leaders are forced to work together. How can the most secure plane in the world get infiltrated is a question without an answer—a theme to this film which mostly sticks to familiar territory, but plays it with enough energy and charisma to entertain. Priyanka Chopra Jonas is cast as no-nonsense MI6 agent Noel Bisset, who assists the on-the-run heads of state in their international expedition as they attempt to stay out of Viktor Gradov's crosshairs and reach the NATO summit unscathed. The icy Viktor Gradov (Paddy Considine) leads a rogue militant faction threatening world leaders during a NATO summit. Naturally, the fate of international diplomacy falls into the hands of Clarke, Derringer, and the highly-skilled Noel, assisted by their respective advisors (Sarah Niles as the American Simone Bradshaw and Richard Coyle as British Quincy Harrington). The casting is the winner here. Cena is a riot. His comic timing is sharp, and he brings a lovable meathead energy to Derringer—star of 'Water Cobra', a movie about a venomous snake in denim. He's the guy who will throw a grenade along with a dialogue from one of his movies, and then immediately high-five himself for it. Idris Elba, on the other hand, is the calm in the storm. His dry delivery and disdain for his American counterpart is perfect, especially when paired with Cena's nonstop antics. Their back-and-forth—often poking fun at British vs. American quirks—is half the fun. Elba's stoic glare bouncing off Cena's impulsiveness doesn't get old and their chemistry carries the movie through its more predictable beats. Noel is a pun-loving, smart and cool agent who balances the otherwise testosterone-heavy leads with Priyanka Chopra Jonas holding her own in nearly every scene she's in. It's refreshing to see her in a role that's funny, physical, and substantial all at once. The action is stylish and quirky. It's not reinventing the genre, but it's done with enough flair and tongue-in-cheek humour to keep things zipping along, smoothly toggling between action and comedy. The action in the backyard of a house in Poland is absurd yet amusing. If there's one weak link, it's the villain. Gradov's not particularly interesting and the movie doesn't spend much time fleshing him out. The real fun is in watching Cena, Elba, and Chopra Jonas play off each other as they try to save the world (and themselves) with minimal planning and maximum chaos. Heads of State succeeds by playing to its stars' strengths. It's pacy, funny, and manages to give its slight premise some bite. 'Heads of State' is on Amazon Prime.

'Heads of State' movie review: John Cena, Idris Elba fuel fizzy action flick
'Heads of State' movie review: John Cena, Idris Elba fuel fizzy action flick

USA Today

time02-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

'Heads of State' movie review: John Cena, Idris Elba fuel fizzy action flick

Action movies have long strained the limits of credulity. Take 'Heads of State,' for example. Idris Elba has charisma and gravitas for days, so being prime minister of England doesn't seem like that much of a stretch. John Cena as president of the United States, though? Can't see him, honestly. As mismatched frenemy world leaders, Elba and Cena actually work well together in that 1980s buddy sense in the action comedy 'Heads of State' (★★½ out of four; rated PG-13; streaming now on Prime Video). Everything around them is far-fetched nonsense, but they're at least fun together, bantering and trying to out-macho each other through a series of explosive misadventures. President Will Derringer (Cena), the former star of the 'Water Cobra' movie franchise, is enjoying the honeymoon phase a few months into his first term. British Prime Minister Sam Clarke (Elba), an ex-soldier, is suffering from slumping approval ratings and bad PR after a botched spy mission. Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox But the 'special relationship' is kind of a hot mess as the two dudes do not like each other. Sam thinks POTUS is a 'gym strong' idiot. Will is still spicy that Sam endorsed his opponent (apparently there was fish and chips involved). Yet they kind of need each other, which is why Sam hitches a ride to an important NATO meeting in Italy on Air Force One. But there's also a global conspiracy to take down NATO, and Air Force One is hijacked. Will and Sam parachute to safety yet the plane crashes. With the world thinking they're dead, the two guys get all their macho bickering out and work together to make the big meeting and keep the bad guys from killing them before they get there. The reluctant pals get some help from a couple of strong supporting characters. Priyanka Chopra Jonas is a joy here as Sam's ex, top MI6 agent Noel Bisset, who finds them and is way better than either of the two at action-hero stuff. And Jack Quaid has a small role as an excitable weapons specialist they run into at a CIA safe house. Cena and Elba showed strong chemistry in 'The Suicide Squad' and that carries over, though 'Heads of State' ends up being a better showcase for Elba, since he's grumpily hilarious even as the straight man to a likably goofy Cena. And the two don't go overtly political either, which they easily could have, given Will's celebrity background and America's current standing in the world. The movie is mostly quippy in that sense, like when Sam pushes pretending they're Canadian in the European wilderness. But the comedy overall isn't as strong as the action sequences: Director Ilya Naishuller ('Nobody') crafts some intricate and slightly amazing stuff – including one well-choreographed fiery bit involving the president's 'Beast' limo. While humorous enough, the movie begs to be in the same silly vein as 'Tropic Thunder' and just can't make the most of its funny bone. 'Heads of State' is a bomb pop of a summer movie. It works as a fizzy, somewhat kid-friendly throwback to action-packed '80s partnerships – think 'Tango & Cash' or 'Lethal Weapon' – that doesn't take itself too seriously and, for a starry streaming action flick, thankfully isn't a lame duck. Where can I watch 'Heads of State'? The John Cena/Idris Elba action comedy "Heads of State" is streaming now on Amazon's Prime Video and is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association "for sequences of strong violence/action, language and some smoking."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store