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AKA

AKA

  • Status: Released
  • 28-04-2023
  • Runtime: 122 min
  • Score: 6.877
  • Vote count: 654

A steely special ops agent finds his morality put to the test when he infiltrates a crime syndicate and unexpectedly bonds with the boss' young son.

Alban Lenoir

Adam Franco

Éric Cantona

Victor Pastore

Thibault de Montalembert

Kruger

Sveva Alviti

Natalya

Saïdou Camara

Pee Wee

Lucille Guillaume

Hélène

Kevin Layne

Moktar Al Tayeb

Philippe Résimont

Sénateur Marconnet

Vincent Heneine

Cisko

Nathalie Odzierejko

Mona

Steve Tientcheu

Youssef

Constantin Vidal

JB

Hugo Dillon

Manu

Noé Chabbat

Jonathan

Jamel Elgharbi

Bogdan

Soufiane Hafraoui

Karim

Sébastien Lalanne

Jacques

Sophie Ricci

Fille Moktar

Klaudia Zhegu

Sophia

Karim Belkhadra

L'égyptien

Sofiane Semachi

Sofiane

Françoise Lenoir

L'intendante

Tibor Audinos

Adam 15 ans

Sultan Ulutaş

Femme Moktar

David Beaulieu

Meunier

Hedi Bouchenafa

Le banquier

Igor Kovalsky

Amet

Julien Buchy

Envoyé spécial

Zaire Souchi

Comptable

Kelian Maréchaux

Janusz

Saïd Benchnafa

Yacine

Antonio Lanciano

Antoine

Georgi Jivkovv

Guetteur

Aude Lepape

Sonia Gautier

Hugues Dago

Présentateur TV5

Axelle Bossard

Présentatrice JT 98

Charles Valter

Blondinet

jw

Too much of everything. AKA is an french action film, with a muscleman at center. That's a traditional setup, and with time, some of them learn the trade. The trouble is not the acting, lack thereof, but with the script. It feels like a group of people went script-shopping and said: We'd like a french action movie, with a tough fighter at the center. He's, uh, to infitrate organised crime. Yeah, organised crime, that's good; drugs and prostitution and that. And add some shady government officials and politicians. Human angle, we need an human angle. Add something about children and protecting them, that's always welcome. If there's child abuse, only offscreen. And we want french muslims, but the modern depiction, right? A bit about neo-colonialism. And some tragic things happening. And betrayal and a plot twist, and this and that... and we want some more action, but not too expensive! The scriptwriters and -doctors did a good job to fit it all into one script they were asked to put in. And the director did the best with what he was given. But watching it, the result feels overloaded. Too many different angles, none played out in-depth. There's excellent movies focusing on two aspects, where this crams in a dozen. And that's why, in the end, this isn't a satisfying watch. They did all they were supposed to do, but it is too constructed, with too many different tropes and genres combined. (The protagonist being in the learning stage about acting doesn't help either, but he's got the build and muscle.) It can fill some time, it's not boring, but not convincing either. 6/10

tmdb51616167

Guess the French was really into giving action films to Netflix this year, given how i just talked about In His Shadow in my last review so the fact that they have been able to do two good action French films in a row here is kinda impressive on Netflix's part. If only that stuck around for a bit more time. I feel like it struggles balancing all of it's plot points that even a 2 hour runtime isn't enough to let all of the plots breath through some of them does have potential like the undercover cop being set within the crime gang, some of the relationships the main character has between the family members or syndicate developing through the film. Like we have plots that contain terrorism, crime family, spy finding his soul and a friendship with the boss’s young son. It should work with it's runtime but cannot find a way to let all of these work together effectively. Shame that the main character isn't interesting to really care about despite the actor's best effort with his performance. It's whenever it focuses on the action, that's where it does pick up thanks to the cinematography and filming. Even with it's pacing and writing issues, i was still able to enjoy the film for it's action and cinematography. If you want to do a double feature action film with a taste of the French in there, Netflix is the place for you.

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