Having collaborated on Taxi
2 (2000), director Gérard Krawczyk and producer Luc Besson joined forces
once more to concoct a similar energetic spectacle of comedy action thriller. As
before, Besson provided the script - one of his better offerings, although clearly a rush
job - and Jean Reno was cast as the film's sympathetic action hero. It's pretty
formulaic stuff - with most of the comedy comcentrated in the spoof action stunts
- but somehow Reno's solid presence gives the film a touch of class and humanity.
The pairing of a gun-toting loner with a naïve young girl invites similarities with
a previous Reno-Besson collaboration, the slick 1994 thriller Léon, albeit with far less blood and
a few more laughs.
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Film Synopsis
Hubert is a police inspector with a kind heart but an iron fist. Although
he gets results, not everyone appreciate his methods. It is whilst
thwarting a transvestite-themed bank robbery that he accidentally demolishes
the son of his police chief. Suspended from work, he is working out
what do with his life when he receives phone call from a Japanese lawyer.
Miko, a Japanese woman Hubert hasn't seen for nearly 20 years, has just died
and has made him her sole beneficiary. Arriving in Japan to attend
Miko's funeral, Hubert discovers that the dead woman has a daughter, Yumi
- the product of their brief liaison. He then finds evidence
that Miko was murdered, leaving an impossibly large sum of money in her bank
account...
In the 1940s, the shadowy, skewed visual style of 1920s German expressionism was taken up by directors of American thrillers and psychological dramas, creating that distinctive film noir look.