Transport Planning and Traffic Safety: Making Cities, Roads, and Vehicles Safer
Dinesh Mohan and Geetam Tiwari
Book
In recognition of the importance of road safety as a major health issue, the World Health...
Particles and Quantum Fields
Book
This is an introductory book on elementary particles and their interactions. It starts out with...
Better Brain Food: Eat to Cheat Dementia and Cognitvie Decline
Ngaire Hobbins and Michelle Crawford
Book
With dementia on the rise, Ngaire Hobbins explains how we can eat to cheat dementia and cognitive...
Gareth von Kallenbach (980 KP) rated Bullet to the Head (2013) in Movies
Aug 7, 2019
Stallone plays James Bonomo, a.k.a. Jimmy Bobo, a thug with a long rap sheet and few friends. After celebrating a successful contract hit, his partner is brutally killed and an attempt is made on Jimmy’s life as well. Suspecting that they’d been setup, James reluctantly meets with a D.C. detective named Taylor Kwon (Sung Kang), who is in town to investigate the murder of his former partner. Fate forces the duo to work with one another despite Kwon’s by-the-book nature and utter disdain for James and his choice of profession. The two soon uncover a large conspiracy that threatens not only their lives but the cities very powerful and elite, making the duo the prime targets for those who will stop at nothing.
Despite having a fairly formulaic plot, the film works very well, thanks in large part to the cast. The two leads work very well with one another, and the fine supporting work by Jason Momoa and Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje really set the tone. The action in the film is intense and at times brutal but does not seem gratuitous, making it clear that the characters live in a violent world where accepting death is second nature to the urge to kill.
Stallone gives a very physical performance as the world weary James and you can tell that he went all out for the films action sequences despite the toll his body had to take. The film is based on the graphic novel “Du Plomb dans la Tête” and captures the elements of a classic film noir, with the action of a buddy cop film without pandering to many of the genre stereotypes.
While I enjoyed Schwarzenegger’s “The Last Stand” a bit more, I was very surprised at how enjoyable the film was after being underwhelmed by the trailer. In the end, if you’re a fan of Stallone, and love a good action film, then this is one you will not want to miss.
Four War Boer: The Century and Life of Pieter Arnoldus Krueler
Book
The amazing life of Pieter Krueler (1885-1986) provides a window into a full century of conflict...
Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be: The Life of Lionel Bart
David Stafford and Caroline Stafford
Book
Lionel Bart was a writer and composer of British pop music and musicals, best known for creating the...
Industrial Policy and Economic Transformation in Africa
Joseph E. Stiglitz and Akbar Noman
Book
The revival of economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa is all the more welcome for having followed one...
Cool Nations: Media and the Social Imaginary of the Branded Country
Book
Nation branding is the most recent feature of imagined nation-making in the history of nations....
The Outpatient Regenerative Medicine: Fat Injection and PRP as Minor Office-Based Procedures
Book
This book is unique in focusing expressly on regenerative medicine in the aesthetic field. With the...
Shit London: Even More Snapshots of a City on the Edge: v. 2
Book
'Nobody is healthy in London. Nobody can be.' Jane Austen Once all the hype, hyperbole and hysteria...

