ElBoxyBrown
Banned
Chris Stuckman - B+
Variety
ForbesIn the movie, multiple Asian teens are killed in an all-too-plausible (albeit dated) act of political terrorism dreamed up and carried out by a faction of the IRA. It's an effective reminder that however scared white Londoners are of foreigners, the foreigners living among them have even more reason to be afraid, living in a country where they could wind up as collateral damage in senseless white-on-white violence. And because this time around Asians are the ones telling the story, it falls to a superstar ”Chinaman" to set things right.
Rolling Stones - 3/4The Foreigner successfully combines both a political drama and a grim revenge thriller with relative aplomb. The violence and action scenes, when they are required, are realistic, brutal and efficiently staged for maximum clarity. The film uses the 19-year gap since the last IRA terrorist attack for dramatic urgency and poignancy, and frankly it was almost refreshing to be able to enjoy a terrorism thriller without feeling guilty (since the bad guys aren't scary brown people). Existing source material notwithstanding, the film's casting of Jackie Chan as an Asian immigrant hunting white European terrorists provides a nice counterpoint to 16 years of often lazy post-9/11 melodrama. That's just one way The Foreigner stands out in familiar territory.
New York Daily News - 3/5Campbell keeps the action cooking and the suspense on a high burner in this compulsively watchable conspiracy thriller, while The Foreigner proves again is that Chan is the Man – now and forever.
Hollywood ReporterFor every ”Rush Hour" there was dreck like ”The Tuxedo" or ”Forbidden Kingdom." Lately, American audiences know him for voicing the odd animated movie or babysitting Jaden Smith in ”The Karate Kid" remake.
We're still waiting for that breakthrough, since ”The Foreigner" doesn't match the punch of his best Hong Kong movies. But this somber turn is still the best the West has given him in a while. That alone should put a smile on fans' faces
Philadelphia Daily News - 2.5/4While Brosnan has quite a few opportunities to show his acting chops, Chan makes do with less: The original novel contained much more about Quoc's motivations and deeds. In any case, it's good to see Chan swapping his happy-go-lucky persona for two hours for some gravitas as a tragic rogue with a marked past.
New York TimesWhat The Foreigner lacks is the lean narrative line of the Taken films — there is a convoluted plot about internal IRA treachery that may leave you baffled. And while the movie initially adheres to the Chan brand — emphasizing athleticism over violence — it turns grisly and vicious in the closing scenes.
That's when it starts to feel more like Taken 4, rather than the Jackie Chan movie it should be.
ScreenCrush - 4/10Mr. Chan is in his early 60s, and he doesn't deliver the action pizazz here that he used to. Nor, frankly, does he summon enough gravitas to be persuasive in the role of a grief-maddened father. For what it's worth, Mr. Brosnan, as Quon's nemesis, sells the angry-all-the-time requirement for his character.
Den of Geek - 2.5/5Quan may not be the most natural fit for Jackie Chan, but he is convincing as a man pushed too far. His diminutive stature and sad eyes also work well for a character whose outward appearance masks superheroic abilities. If only he got to flex them a little more, in a story that didn't feel like it arrived a quarter century too late. The stuff involving Brosnan and his flimsy political future keeps taking up more and more time, pushing Chan further and further into the background. By the end, he feels like a foreigner in his own movie.
We Live EntertainmentJackie Chan's Quan dodders around, shoulders slumped, head down, speaking quietly, and he's utterly believable as a broken man with a darker past than his kindly exterior hints at, which makes his proficiency in inflicting pain all the more fun. Even at 63, Chan can still make you believe when he's going to town on someone, even if he's not attempting any of the pure stunt fight insanity that brought him legendary status. And make no mistake, there's definitely some joy in seeing Jackie Chan going head to head with Pierce Brosnan. But the mystery of how you can put two of the most effortlessly charismatic action heroes of a generation on screen together and not manage to conjure up any charm at all, let alone an ounce of sympathy for either of these supposedly layered characters, will haunt audiences far more than the movie itself.
It will be fine if Jackie Chan wants to make more dramatic movies but they'll have to be good. His comedies can coast on ridiculous plots because they are so entertaining and unique. Hollywood genre movies are a dime a dozen so there's no reason to watch a lousy one. At the very least, if The Foreigner didn't take itself so seriously it could've had fun with this ludicrous premise.
Currently 56% on RT.