Atomic Blonde 2017 -
The story—a double-crossing hunt for a stolen “list” of every operative in Berlin—is deliberately convoluted. We jump between Lorraine’s black-and-white debriefing (complete with a scenery-chewing Toby Jones and a deadpan John Goodman) and her flashback mission. There are KGB moles, CIA opportunists, French contacts, and a slippery spy named Percival (a brilliantly weaselly Eddie Marsan).
Leitch understands that spy-on-spy violence isn’t pretty. It’s exhausting, messy, and painful. The centerpiece—a single-take (or brilliant simulation of one) stairwell fight—is a masterpiece of choreography and stamina. Theron’s Lorraine Broughton doesn’t glide through enemies like John Wick; she staggers, gasps, slips on her own blood, and uses furniture, doorframes, and ice picks with desperate ingenuity. Every punch lands with a wet thud, every kick feels earned. It’s the anti-Bourne: no shaky-cam, just long, wide shots that let you feel every agonizing second. atomic blonde 2017
Atomic Blonde is not a thinking person’s Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy . It’s a punk-rock, leather-clad cousin to John Wick —less interested in the geopolitics of the list than in the geometry of a well-thrown punch. The story—a double-crossing hunt for a stolen “list”