Preview by Jon Donnis
It's never subtle when action comes from France, and Angel of the Warrior is no exception. This latest high-intensity feature drops a lone, haunted ex-agent into the middle of a brutal underworld, blending close-quarters martial arts with full-scale gunfire and a streak of emotional grit. With Alexandre Lagrange directing, choreographing, and starring in the lead role, it's a personal project in every sense, and the result looks set to be a no-holds-barred showcase of fists, firepower and fury.
Lagrange plays Alex Garner, a former secret service operative who's been ground down by grief and trauma. Still haunted by the violent death of his closest friend, he's cut himself off from the world, living out his days in silence and shadow. That changes when he stumbles across a terrified young girl, hidden in the back of a stolen car. Her name is Nina. She's been kidnapped, and the people behind it are far from amateurs. They're the foot soldiers of Cherman, a ruthless mafia boss with no qualms about destroying anything that gets in his way.
What follows looks to be a brutal, bare-knuckle clash between a man who's lost everything and a criminal empire that underestimates what that kind of grief can do. Alex forms a bond with Nina, one that gives him a renewed sense of purpose, and when she's threatened again, his mission becomes personal. Blood is spilled. Alliances are tested. And a one-man war begins.
Tanae Lagrange brings a strong presence as Nina, while Cristelle Leonard takes on double duty, co-writing the film and appearing as Mila, a trusted friend pulled into the crossfire. Raymond Forestier plays Cherman with a cold, deliberate menace that should give the action stakes worth caring about.
The set-up might sound familiar, but it's all about the delivery. With real-life martial arts training behind it, and tightly shot combat sequences promised throughout, Angel of the Warrior could deliver the kind of visceral punch rarely seen outside of big-budget fare. If you're into your action fast, grimy, and driven by emotion rather than spectacle alone, this one might hit the mark.
On digital 7 July from Reel 2 Reel Films, Angel of the Warrior doesn't look like it's here to reinvent the genre. It just wants to punch a hole straight through it.