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'Red Sparrow' with Jennifer Lawrence takes nasty nose-dive with torture, assault scenes

“Red Sparrow” - ★ ★

The timing couldn't be better for “Red Sparrow” to sweep into theaters with its story of a Russian spy and an American spy trying to outwit one another. As one character in the thriller declares, “The Cold War never ended.” No kidding.

Jennifer Lawrence assumes a Russian accent to play Dominika Egorova, a star ballerina whose dancing career is cut short after she suffers a sickening injury onstage. She lives with her mother (Joely Richardson), an invalid who requires frequent monitoring, but Dominika's apartment and her mom's care are both paid for by the Bolshoi, which bows out after the injury. That means the young woman has to find a way to make money fast. In a moment of desperation, she agrees to help her leering uncle Vanya (Matthias Schoenaerts), a Soviet intelligence officer, on one mission.

The assignment unexpectedly ends in an assassination. Since no witnesses outside the intelligence agency can be allowed to live, Dominika has a choice that's really no choice at all: Die or go to school to become a “sparrow.” She chooses the latter before realizing that it's really all about using her body: The curriculum of pornographic films plus more, well, hands-on activities, teaches the arts of seduction and manipulation, and Dominika excels despite loathing every second of it.

Former ballerina Dominika Egorova (Jennifer Lawrence) learns lock-picking and other skills as she trains to be a Russian spy in "Red Sparrow." Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

“Your body belongs to the state,” the stern headmistress (Charlotte Rampling) informs her.

And we haven't even gotten to the cat-and-mouse game yet. That's the chief problem with “Red Sparrow.” The film squeezes in so much back story from the novel it's based on, by former CIA operative Jason Matthews, that it has to rush through the real conflict after Dominika is sent to Budapest and ordered to seduce American spy Nate Nash (Joel Edgerton). Her mission is to uncover the identity of a mole who's almost certainly a high-ranking Russian intelligence officer.

By then, there's no time to develop the pair's relationship. What was a steamy battle of wits in the novel looks more like a chemistry-free charade on-screen. Instead of character development, the audience gets torture galore, whether it's Dominika being doused with freezing water while naked and tied to a chair or a particularly sadistic character flaying someone alive.

“Red Sparrow” has the nudity and sex of an erotic thriller and the stomach-churning gore of a slasher flick, but it also strives to be more than a genre movie. Despite stylish direction by Francis Lawrence and hints of deeper themes about female agency in a world dominated by callous men, the movie never really rises above pulp.

Meanwhile, the top-notch cast of mostly British actors, including Jeremy Irons and Ciarán Hinds, have varying degrees of success with the Russian accents, which is just one more distraction in a movie teeming with them. It's hard to overlook, for example, the sheer number of sexual assaults Dominika is subjected to or the way the camera ogles its female lead with the same discomfiting gaze as her perverted boss.

Lawrence still makes the most of a movie that doesn't always live up to her talents, although it does redeem itself somewhat with a satisfying conclusion. Whether it's worth sitting through graphic skin removal, though, will be a matter of personal preference.

<b>Starring:</b> Jennifer Lawrence, Joel Edgerton, Matthias Schoenaerts, Joely Richardson, Charlotte Rampling, Jeremy Irons, Ciarán Hinds

<b>Directed by:</b> Francis Lawrence

<b>Other:</b> A Twentieth Century Fox release. Rated R for violence, sexual situations, language and nudity. 138 minutes

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