Free Fire is quick to establish its main players, and it does so effectively – a deal broker, Justine (Brie Larson) has organised a weapons deal between Irishman Chris (Cillian Murphy) and South African Vernon (Sharlto Copley). They’re assisted by loyal Frank (Michael Smiley) and suave Ord (Armie Hammer), while the muscle-for-hire, Stevo (Sam Riley) and Harry (Jack Reynor), are too hot-headed for their own good, leading to a tense deal heading southward, and what might then be the climax of another crime film becomes the main bulk of Free Fire: a shoot-out between all parties involved, where loyalties are tested as much as the human body’s resilience to bullet wounds.
The performances are all routinely good, with only Copley and Hammer really standing out, but being given showier roles than others. The dialogue is funny as you might expect, though some moments felt forced. There are nicely subtle references to the gender- and race-politics of the film’s 1970s setting, but I think actually a bit more of that would have made the film more interesting (to me, at least). The action itself is entertaining enough, though some of the shoot-out sequences are shot a bit too frenetically for my taste. Though on the one hand I respect Wheatley for not having more Peckinpah-esque slo-mo in the mix, given his own taste for it, I actually rather missed having a trademark trippy, dreamy sequence in the film – particularly given the 70s setting.
Free Fire certainly makes for a pacy, entertaining 90 minutes, but it didn’t strike me as particularly memorable or impressive. For me, Wheatley’s yet to reach those giddy Sightseers heights again, and I do wonder whether my enjoyment of that film is much more to do with Alice Lowe and Steve Oram’s script and performances than anything else. Free Fire’s worth a watch, but I wanted so much more.