He’s a lot obsessive in every way perhaps it’s the residue of a secret-service career.
(READ: Corliss on Liam Neeson in Unknown) He won’t even let the young woman drive the family car.
(Kim must be in her early twenties by now the actress who plays her is 29.) To Bryan, any guy who snuggles with his daughter is automatically in the pedophile category. Three years later, he gives a neck-swivel of suspicion when Lennie tells him that Kim has a boyfriend.
The first movie established that Bryan was divorced from Lenore and deeply possessive of Kim - so much so that paternal care approached felonious stalking. Learning that Bryan has invited Kim and her mother Lenore or Lennie (Famke Janssen) for a family-rehab vacation in Istanbul, Murad kidnaps Bryan and Lenore, while the frazzled but resourceful Kim escapes another covey of killers in the hotel and combs the city to find her parents. In the sequel, directed by Olivier Megaton from a script by Robert Mark Kamen and producer Luc Beson, Murad (Rade Serbedzija), father of the gang leader whom Bryan had hunted down and killed, swears a mission of vengeance on behalf of his son and all the grieving widows, mothers and orphans in the Albanian underworld. Recall that, in Taken, Bryan, a retired CIA agent, went to Paris to save his daughter Kim (Maggie Grace), abducted by white-slave traders. Now a sturdy 60, Neeson is among the most reliable and appealing modern movie heroes.
Other thrifty, manly fare followed - Unknown, The Grey - plus a stint heading The A-Team. Taken also elevated Neeson from supporting roles in big-budget franchises ( Star Wars, Batman Begins) and leads in artier films ( Michael Collins, Kinsey) to a B-plus level of action stardom. Those are just a few of the espionage skills demonstrated by Liam Neeson’s Bryan Mills in Taken 2, a hyperdrive sequel to the 2009 thriller that cost $25 million to produce and earned nearly 10 times that at the worldwide box office. His merest, mesmeric touch puts bad guys into the big sleep. When face to face with the villain-in-chief, he can apply the mystic face grip, which has the ability not only to cloud men’s minds but, in a trice, end their lives. Noticing that his cell has a vent leading to the roof, he can tell his daughter to look for smoke coming from a rooftop stack, go there and drop a gun down it.
(It helps that his captors haven’t frisked him or left a guard to observe his movements.)Ĥ. Using a tiny cellphone, he can communicate from the hideaway to his daughter in an Istanbul hotel, telling her to lob grenades onto one rooftop or another so he can lead her to his secret location. When kidnapped and blindfolded by Albanian gunmen, he can rely on his photographic memory, both visual and aural, to determine within a few blocks the location of the hideaway he and his wife have been taken to.ģ. Then he dispatches five of his pursuers in one brief battle.Ģ. Believing his car is being followed through the streets of Istanbul by men who mean him no good, he can spit out precise and elaborate instructions for his wife to escape through shops and down streets of the city’s bazaar.