‘Suicide Squad’ has its moments


MOVIE REVIEW

“Suicide Squad”

Grade: C+

Starring Will Smith, Margo Robbie and Jared Leto. Directed by David Ayer.

Rated PG-13 for sequences of violence and action throughout, disturbing behavior, suggestive content and language. Check listings for theaters. 2 hours, 10 minutes.

Bottom line: Characters are more fun than the actual story

Superhero fatigue? Warner Brothers and DC Comics have a remedy for that with “Suicide Squad,” filled with characters who are decidedly uninterested in heroics. “We’re bad guys,” sneers demented clown Harley Quinn, in case there was any question. They’re so bad, that the narrative around the film has centered around the on-the-set antics of the cast and crew. While the tales of pranks and anarchy are starting to feel like the Squad doth protest too much, writer/director David Ayer and crew have delivered a refreshingly sarcastic and cynical slice of comic book mayhem, with just a drop of syrupy sweetness.

Based on the attention, you’d expect Jared Leto’s Joker to be the star of “Suicide Squad,” but that’s not the case, fortunately. A little bit of Leto’s hipster pimp Joker goes a very long way. The film assuredly belongs to Will Smith, whose pure star power eclipses everyone around him, and in his performance as Deadshot, a hit man who never misses, he owns both the emotional stakes and the humor of “Suicide Squad.”

A close second to Smith is Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, the Joker’s misbegotten girlfriend, a psychiatrist who gained a sassy New Yawk accent and turned into a wild, nutty harlot after a dip in a toxic chemical bath. She’s fearlessly unhinged, swinging a baseball bat, somehow managing to make smeared clown makeup sexy.

The other Squad standouts are Jay Hernandez as Diablo, a gang member with a face full of tattoos and a fistful of fiery powers, and Jai Courtney as wild-man Aussie bank robber Boomerang. This is Courtney’s best role yet, one with actual personality, and Hernandez is a welcome presence back on the big screen.

The idea is to fight terrorist “meta-humans,” as superheroes are known in this world, with other meta-humans — the Diablos, Killer Crocs and other variously gifted, if morally corrupt loners. She puts soldier Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman) in charge, exploiting his vested interest in the protection of his girlfriend Dr. June Moone (Cara Delevigne), who’s possessed by an ancient witch, Enchantress.

When “Suicide Squad” is on, it’s very much on. The soundtrack rips with classic rock and hip hop, and Harley and Deadshot keep the quips and clips firing on all cylinders. But for all the promise of wild and wacky weirdness, it feels somehow smaller in scale than the colorful pop-art posters promise.

Powered by the star power of Smith, Robbie, and the ferocious Davis, “Suicide Squad” has its inspired moments. The characters are the ultimate in “squad goals,” but they’re far more fun than the actual story itself.