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HEADS OF STATE: 3 ½ STARS. “likeable leads with action and humor.”

SYNOPSIS: “Heads of State” is a Prime Video action-comedy featuring Idris Elba as Sam Clarke, a former commando-turned UK Prime Minister, and John Cena as Will Derringer, a former action star, now President of the United States, who is as loose as Clarke is uptight. “He still hasn’t figured out the difference between a press conference and a press junket,” says Clarke. When an international conspiracy threatens world peace, they can save the world, but only if they can put aside their differences. “The universe keeps telling me I look cool with a gun in my hand,” says Derringer.

CAST: Idris Elba, John Cena, Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Jack Quaid, Carla Gugino, Paddy Considine, Stephen Root, Sarah Niles, Richard Coyle, Clare Foster, Katrina Durden, Aleksandr Kuznetsov. Directed by Ilya Naishuller.

REVIEW: If the title “Heads of State” sounds like a throwback title from the 1990s it’s because the film is a return to the action comedies of the Clinton years. It’s a crowd-pleasing mix of likeable leads, ridiculous action and humor that echoes movies like “True Lies” or “Rush Hour,” films that got the balance of laughs and action just right.

The “embarrassing popcorn president” named William Matthew Derringer—“Your initials are WMD?” Clark asks incredulously—and the pragmatic prime minister are the engine that keeps “Heads of State” on track. A stacked supporting cast, including Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Jack Quaid, Carla Gugino, Paddy Considine and Stephen Root, fill out the film’s edges, but it is Elba and Cena who hold its center, nicely playing off their opposite personalities.

Reteamed from “The Suicide Squad,” where they shared action-comedy moments as Bloodsport and Peacemaker, they are chalk and cheese with the chops to hold the film’s disparate tone together.

For the most part “Heads of State” avoids any heavy moralizing and sticks to its frenetic but lighthearted vibe. Sure, there is a disbanding NATO subplot, some America First banter and it doesn’t take much imagination to figure out who screenwriters Josh Appelbaum, André Nemec and Harrison Query are referring to when they have a character say, “The people elect a dopey actor as leader of the free world, of course their country can’t survive,” but “Head of State” isn’t about political discourse. It’s about chemistry and bombastic action, tinged with a hint of nostalgia for the buddy movies of the past.


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