By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted July 18, 2020
Comic books
have been the fertile fodder for television and subsequently cinema for more
than half a century. Ever since Superman came on black and white TV,
superheroes have excited viewing audiences and inspired them to ‘look, up in
the sky [and see] it’s a bird; no it’s a plane; no it’s Superman!’ as the
refrain from the weekly TV show used to chime.
For the
latest generation of local superhero fans, it’s mainly DC and Marvel comics
that have provided them with a slew of exciting superheroes, from Batman and
Iron Man to Thor, Hulk, Wonder Woman and so many more.
But ever
since 2017, ‘The Old Guard’ has been out, first, in comic book form, courtesy
of its creator Greg Rucha who used to write for DC but subsequently started his
own Image Comics. Then early this month (July), the elite team of nomadic immortals
who make up ‘the old guard’ came out as the newest set of action-adventurers on
Netflix, Rucha having also written the screenplay for the film.
Starring Charlize
Theron as the ‘kickass’ leader of this rogue band of death-defying warriors who
have literally been around for centuries (and in Andy’s case, for millennia),
fighting against evil doers, and for the proverbial underdogs. Theron also
coproduced The Old Guard which has been the most-viewed new film on Netflix charts
since it came out.
It isn’t
often that we see women warriors leading an ‘army’ as Andy (Theron) describes
her immortal band of ancients to her young initiate, the African American
female marine, Nile Freeman (Kiki Layne). She’s just ‘kidnapped’ Nile from her base
camp in Afghanistan shortly after it’s been discovered that there’s something
very strange about the young Black woman.
There were
witnesses who saw Nile’s throat slit in combat. Yet they also saw her a few
hours later, up and ready to get back into combat.
It’s a
dilemma the Old Guard understand well, especially now as they are being stalked
by mercenaries sent by a big Pharma tycoon who wants to market their immortal
DNA. But first, they must be caught which is why the tycoon enlisted mercenaries
headed by former CIA agent Copley (Chiwetel Ejiofor) to snag the Guard.
Having
fought in and survived wars going back long before the Crusades, their Amazon-like
leader Theron plays the millennial freedom fighter whose name, Andy is short for
Andromache, named after the mythic Greek princess and wife of Hector whose
brother Paris started the Trojan war.
Theron revisits
the tough-girl character that she’s played previously in films like ‘Atomic
Blond’ and ‘Mad Max Fury Road’. But under the direction of African American
female director, Gina Prince-Bythewood she stars as a woman leader who has the
miraculous capacity to not just kill and be killed; she’s got the power to
resurrect to fight another day.
It’s a power
embedded in the story as well since a sequel is already under discussion
between Rucha and Netflix.
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