A  pre-chainsaw extravaganza where the Romans talk like James Bond and the  Picts have better military backgrounds than the American generals who  invaded Afghanistan. Michael Fassbender, Dominic West and Olga Kurylenko  team up for this roller coaster of brutish violence set in the first  century AD in the desolate winter of the Scottish Highlands. “Centurion”  follows on    the heels of the much-ballyhooed “Robin Hood”
ancient history action  thriller by stealing the show from its higher budget predecessor.Set  in about 150 AD the story is about Romans fighting the ancient tribal  Picts in the awesome, snow swept highlands of Northern Scotland.
Although  the intent appears to be to make a film that was more explicitly brutal  and more graphically terrifying than “Robin Hood” the result is much  more than that. It is an honest, straightforward blood fest in the mold  of the old Viking films.
There  are the bashings and beheadings of the neo-“Braveheart” films and there  is also a little Werner Herzog “Survival Dawn,” “Dances With Wolves”  and the chase scenes of “Butch Cassidy” (“Who ARE those guys…”). With a  little Monty Python for good measure.
This  film is better than a bloody toothed banshee Texas chainsaw  extravaganza. Special make up effects designer Paul Hyett found his  dream job with limitless crushed heads, severed arms and spurting neck  slashes.
The  encyclopedia Britannica of arrow, spear and pike wounds. The PhD of  punctures. He reported that they started off with about 200 liters of  fake blood and used it up halfway through shooting. Once you get started  with this kind of production it can be hard to back off.
If  you saw Hyett’s work in another fantastic Neil Marshall film, “The  Descent,” with the flesh eating slime monster and the hapless girls in  the cave losing body parts one by one, you know where this team is  coming from.
Unfortunately,  by about half way through the film the special effects, costumes and  make-up begin to wear thin. How much can one person do with hatchets?  Even the ultra-stylized Pict she-warrior Etain (played to the hilt by  Olga Kurylenko) starts to look like the same-old, same-old. Honey, do  you have to smear that shade of gore on your cheeks all the time?
The  chase has gone on too long with insufficient reason given for the  survival of the wimpy Romans. They are obviously outmatched in every way  by the Picts and have been running over the frozen mountains all but  barefoot for a hundred miles.
Are  we supposed to believe this? There has to be some reason given why the  centurion gets away with it for as long as he does, but none is given.  At that point, the film crosses over the line from semi-reality to comic  book super-hero and the two genres do not mix.
If  you are a sucker for action flicks, especially the ancient war/siege,  axe and boiling oil flicks, you will like “Centurion.” By the end of the  film it is coming off as almost a B movie but it still has that  chutzpah to keep on slashing, bashing and burning.
I’m  not sure that even the film makers are aware of the times the film  drops off the edge of sadistic drama into the Monty Python zone (“You  want to slit his throat? OK, we’ll flip for it…”). The film fades in the  second half but is a great and entertaining romp, nonetheless. Not as  well acted as, say, “Braveheart,” but much better, more unvarnished and  visceral, than “Robin Hood.”
The  eating of the caribou stomach contents should go down in history as one  of the most memorable savage killer gross-outs on film. It is almost as  good as the baby monster emerging from Kane’s chest in the original  “Alien.” This is inspiring stuff, but for only the most august  action-thriller aficionados.
Directed and Written by: Neil Marshall
Starring: Michael Fassbender, Dominic West and Olga Kurylenko
Runtime: 97 minutes
Source: (wateen.net) 