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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Mark Olsen

Review: Espionage team-up of 'The 355' fails to come together

As explained in "The 355," a female spy known to history only by her code name 355 played a pivotal role in gathering intelligence against the British during the American Revolution. The film follows an international group of contemporary female intelligence agents who unite to track down a dangerous piece of technology before it falls into the wrong hands. Directed by Simon Kinberg from a script he co-wrote with Theresa Rebeck, the movie is low-energy entertainment that feels like a letdown given the talent involved.

Jessica Chastain, also a producer on the project, plays a hard-boiled CIA agent, while Diana Kruger plays her equally tough German counterpart. Lupita Nyong'o is a former British agent reluctantly brought back in, while Penelope Cruz plays a Colombian psychologist who has never worked in the field before. Chinese star Bingbing Fan is an operative of uncertain loyalties. As the five come together for a shared goal of saving the world — "the enemy of my enemy is my friend," as someone says — they find themselves on the run from various government agencies while in pursuit of violent arms dealers.

The storytelling and plotting feels pulled together from spare parts of recent "Mission: Impossible" and James Bond films, with a disavowal here and some light parkour there and multiple destabilizing double-crosses. The high-gloss sheen and glamour of those films, with their spectacular international locales and operatic action, prove harder to replicate here. The action sequences feel a bit perfunctory and don't provide the necessary punctuation to the rest of the story.

The film's most notable addition is its attempt to acknowledge that these women have, need to have, lives outside their jobs, even with an occupation such as international intelligence. Chastain's character, reprising emotional beats from the performer's role as a CIA analyst in "Zero Dark Thirty," has long had only her work, and the story emphasizes her isolation. In a moment that becomes the film's thematic centerpiece, Chastain says, "James Bond never has to deal with real life" to which Nyong'o responds, "James Bond always ends up alone."

Cruz finds the most to latch onto, bringing an authenticity to her stress while constantly checking in with her family back home and adding a light screwball dusting when her character must awkwardly flirt to gain information. Kruger comes across as the most at ease with the picture's action, while Nyong'o seems to be having the most fun, bringing a much-needed energetic brio to the story.

The signified cool walk-off music that leads into the end credits (and leaves the door open for a sequel) is Peaches' song "Boys Wanna Be Her," also the theme music to the TV show "Full Frontal With Samantha Bee." And that's indicative of the larger problem with the movie, that everywhere it should feel risky and energizing, it instead feels familiar and a bit tired. Simply having women star in a sluggish iteration of an airport dad-novel espionage-action story is not inspiring on its own. Despite a few scattered moments, the team-up action of "The 355" never fully comes together.

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‘THE 355’

MPAA rating: (PG-13, for sequences of strong violence, brief strong language, and suggestive material)

Running time: 2:04

Where to watch: Now playing in theaters

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