Eschewing the expectation that he perhaps stick to cranking out hand-wringing dramas of uptight manners, Atonement and Pride & Prejudice director Joe Wright veers in a surprising new direction with the revenge thriller Hanna, which courses with an unflagging, forward-leaning vigor. The engaging results, which feel like a bold, purposeful step toward modernity on his part, show he has a good instinct for melding the dynamics of a more conventional piece of pop action entertainment with something a bit offbeat and barbed.
The film opens in the snowy wilds of Finland, where 16-year-old Hanna Heller (Saoirse Ronan) has the strength, stamina, smarts and lethal combat skill set of a soldier twice her age, thanks to the intense training of her father Erik (Eric Bana), an ex-CIA agent. The reasons for their curious, extreme isolation come into focus when Hanna indicates her readiness to finally accept a long-planned quest of revenge against a seemingly ruthless government operative from Erik’s past, Marissa Wiegler (Cate Blanchett). As Hanna tries to carry out her solo mission and then reunite with Erik, darker secrets about both her past and her father’s relationship with Marissa color the wild, life-and-death struggle for which she’s been preparing her entire life.
Hanna starts with a bang, like a thoroughbred horse out of the starting gate, and though on rare occasion it feels like it suffers from a case of slight stylistic overreach, a narrative significance and reasoning for this tack develops, and so Wright plugs into a punkish energy arguably not as convincingly attached to a female action protagonist since Run Lola Run. Since Hanna is constantly learning more about her past, too, the movie is gripping as a quasi-amnesiac thriller, a la The Bourne Identity. The little-girl-assassin underpinnings make the film sound vaguely like Kick-Ass, but Hanna‘s human contours make it more rooted in character, and reminiscent of something like The Professional, albeit with a few booster supplements.
Cinematographer Alwin Küchler luxurious widescreen framing, combined with frequently long takes, nicely showcases Sarah Greenwood’s fabulous production design. Wright and his collaborators also seed their work with various fairytale allusions. With her severe makeup, ruby-red lipstick and stalking demeanor, Marissa echoes a wicked witch, and Erik is an earthy woodcutter in the vein of Rapunzel’s father. Various settings are similarly informed by fairytale archetypes. An undeniably strong selling point of Hanna is also found in its bristling, innovative score from the Chemical Brothers, which alternately gurgles, throbs and pulsates, sounding at times like a Madhatter’s rave. It’s an exceptionally imaginative soundtrack that expands upon staid notions of film scoring.
Blanchett’s steeliness gives Hanna a welcome edge and depth, since one hypothesizes her inflexibility is rooted in some moral reasoning. Wright, meanwhile, obviously has a good rapport with his Atonement collaborator Ronan, and it is the latter’s preternatural maturity that powers this ride. She imbues her character with depth, and also handles the considerable physical demands with aplomb.
Housed in a standard plastic case in turn stored in a cardboard slipcover, Hanna comes to Blu-ray presented in a stunning 1080p high-definition 2.40:1 widescreen transfer, and anchored by an English language DTS-HD master audio 5.1 track. (DVS 2.0, as well as Spanish and French DTS surround 5.1 tracks are also available.) In addition to BD-Live content and a digital copy, a nice slate of bonus features consist of four minutes of deleted scenes, an audio commentary track with Wright, a two-minute look at the movie’s expansive location filming, a six-minute look at Ed and Tom Rowlands’ approach to writing the score, a breakout featurette examining the film’s stunning “Camp G” escape sequence, and a 13-minute featurette with plenty of behind-the-scenes footage and fight training material showcasing Ronan’s work with stunt coordinator Jeff Imada. This is a great movie, and a right proper home video release that invites multiple viewings. To purchase the Blu-ray via Amazon, click here. A- (Movie) A- (Disc)