Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    The Movie Buff
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • About
      • Critics
      • Press & Testimonials
      • Friends of the Buff
      • Terms of Use
      • Thank You!
    • Film Reviews & Coverage
      • Movie Reviews
      • TV/Streaming Reviews
      • Film Festival Coverage
      • Interviews
    • Podcasts
    • Indie Film
      • Reviews & Articles
    • Advertise
    • Contact
      • Write for us
    The Movie Buff
    Action

    Review: Denzel’s Back in ‘The Equalizer 3’ Against the Italian Mafia in Antoine Fuqua’s Somewhat-Struggling Final Chapter

    Mark Ziobro By Mark ZiobroJanuary 11, 2024No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    Equalizer 3
    Denzel Washington in a scene from "The Equalizer 3." (Photo: Columbia Pictures).
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link

    With all-things CIA and espionage hidden on the underbelly of “The Equalizer” franchise’s Robert McCall, part of the charm of the series opener was its simplicity. McCall, spending his evenings in a Boston diner, drinking tea and reminiscing about his late wife, made him approachable and instantly lovable. And when he jumps in to defend a sex worker from the Russian mob, the film follows a slow arch that, despite its leaps into flat-out action, is relatively believable. The lever that made it work was McCall was forced into this situation—he didn’t seek it. “The Equalizer 2” kind of strays from that idea; and in “The Equalizer 3,” released last September, director Antoine Fuqua (who directed Denzel to an Oscar in “Training Day”), seems to want to remedy that approach. But it’s a film that hinges more on action than heart, and it shows. 

    Sun-baked Italy is the backdrop for this film (first, Palermo, and later the small town of Altamonte). And in a departure from the slow-burn of “The Equalizer,” we see McCall in action right away. Denzel Washington—now 69—reprises the role. And even as he reaches 70, he doesn’t miss a step in the film’s action sequences. The opening is filmed via a series of cut-scenes as McCall takes out some criminals, telling the leader that he “stole something from someone,” and he’s here to take it back. That the criminals are terrorists in league with Middle Eastern bad actors matters not to McCall. He’s here to help a friend—likely one that doesn’t even know he’s repaying the favor. 

    A little too fast-paced for its own good

    The problem with the film’s opening is that it’s too fast and furious; it wants to insert us headfirst into the action—into McCall’s macabre variety of killing and split-second timing—without setting the stage. He arrives in the quaint village of Altamonte after. However, I feel the film would have done better service to McCall’s character by having him vacation in Italy, and discovering its peace, rather than already being there status post some violent act. 

    But I’m digressing. Fuqua wants to highlight the quaintness of Altamonte and the serenity of its denizens, and he succeeds well. A village doctor McCall meets (Remo Girone) and a friend (Gina Scodellaro) help set the scene. Fuqua sets the same tone that Anton Corbijn’s excellent “The American” did well in laying bare the majesty of Italy. McCall blends in well, appreciating the finer things (a glass of wine, local fare, a good meal, etc.) while dropping covert intel to a CIA operative (Dakota Fanning, reuniting with Denzel many years after the revenge-thriller “Man on Fire”). 

    Equalizer 3
    Giorgio Antonini and Andrea Scarduzio in “The Equalizer 3.” (Stefano Montesi/Sony/TNS).

    What McCall needs to equalize this time are hostilities by the Italian mafia towards the villagers of Altamonte. And here we see the true mafia, not the covetous versions in the cinema of Martin Scorsese, but the irreverent horror from the opening to Coppola’s “The Godfather.” The mafia are a disease; and here, Fuqua shows them terrorizing the locals. In the film’s most despairing scene, vicious Vincent (Andrea Scarduzio) hangs a man in a wheelchair and drops him out a window when he won’t sign away his property to make way for shops and casinos. “Because of these people, I’m beginning to understand peace. You don’t get to take that away from me,” McCall calmly tells Vincent. At this point, McCall has already killed someone dear to Vincent, in a scene that’s both a shameless plug for the watch brand Bvlgari, and a hysterical set up (“is that a Timex?”). 

    But make no mistake—Denzel’s still got it

    “The Equalizer 3’s” strengths lie in it cinematography and intent—namely to show a bad man who intends to do good. Cinematographer Robert Richardson shoots most of the delicacies of Italy in sunny daylight, and most of the Mafia harassments and McCall revenge in darkness. The film also slows to a steady crawl once we get past the massacre that opened the film on a farm in Palermo. This is a good thing; it’s the charm that made the aforementioned “The American” great, and also what made “The Equalizer” feel authentic. A shop owner being strong-armed by the Mafia refused to let McCall pay because he’s the doctor’s friend. It’s not hard to understand why McCall wants to protect these people. 

    However, in that stillness and quiet also lies the film’s criticisms. Inserting Fanning into the proceedings and bringing full frontal the CIA on missions—juxtaposed with McCall’s actions—make the film feel overstuffed. McCall boasts his Black Ops knowledge, where in the series opener he did everything to protect it. It makes for an odd match, and it’s clear the film’s trio of writers (Richard Wenk, Michael Sloan, and Richard Lindheim) want “The Equalizer 3” to feel more like an opp and less like passioned do-gooding. Maybe it’s hard to follow up on a good idea (the three wrote the previous films as well). But without McCall brining out the best in people like before, the film’s inevitable ending, bringing him straight-up against the Mafia like an immovable force, seems a forgone conclusion rather than something we can sit up and get nervous about. 

    Forgetting who Robert McCall is?

    Equalizer 3
    Denzel Washington in “The Equalizer 3.” (Stefano Montesi/Sony/TNS).

    All-in-all, “The Equalizer 3” is not bad. It gets confused along the way of what it wants to be—an all-out butt kicking or a protective drama—but still has redeeming moments. Denzel shows he can still hold his own on the action ground, and the film introduces townsfolk we really like. But it’s ending feels rushed. And seeing as this is the closer to the trilogy, it leaves McCall shortchanged in the development department. Violent kills bookend a portrait of idyllic life. I only wish the film had given McCall a proper sendoff and drive. Wiping out the Mafia is a joy to watch. But looking back, saving a beaten girl in the film’s opener seemed more like the real Robert McCall that the subsequent films tried so hard to capitalize on. 

     

     

     

     

    “The Equalizer 3” is currently available to watch on most streaming platforms. 

    action Antoine Fuqua crime Denzel Washington Equalizer Italy mafia
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticlePhilippine Cinema, Front and Center: The Top 10 Filipino Movies of 2023
    Next Article 24 in 24: DAY ONE – Iconic Series Starts with a Bang. *Explosion
    Mark Ziobro
    • Website
    • Facebook
    • X (Twitter)
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn

    Mark is a lifetime film lover and founder and Chief Editor of The Movie Buff. His favorite genres are horror, drama, and independent. He misses movie rental stores and is always on the lookout for unsung movies to experience.

    Related Posts

    Drama June 16, 2025

    ‘Happy Birthday’ Tribeca Review: A Beautifully Grounded Portrait of Classism, Labor, and Girlhood

    Black Comedy June 16, 2025

    ‘Sister Midnight’ Review: Sapped of All Energy, a Defiant Domestic Goddess Bites Back

    Independent June 15, 2025

    ‘Honeyjoon’ Tribeca Review: A Tender—If Tonally Uneven—Study on the Stubborn Bonds Between Mothers and Daughters

    Independent June 12, 2025

    Tribeca Review: ‘A Tree Fell in the Woods’—But the Drama Barely Rustled

    World Cinema June 11, 2025

    ‘Cuerpo Celeste’ Tribeca Review: A Solar Eclipse Over Grief and Growing Up

    Movie Review June 10, 2025

    ‘The Day After’ Review: Epic TV Movie Demonstrates the 80s Don’t Hold Punches

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Posts

    ‘Happy Birthday’ Tribeca Review: A Beautifully Grounded Portrait of Classism, Labor, and Girlhood

    By Paul Emmanuel EnicolaJune 16, 20250

    ‘Sister Midnight’ Review: Sapped of All Energy, a Defiant Domestic Goddess Bites Back

    By Vidal DcostaJune 16, 20250

    ‘Honeyjoon’ Tribeca Review: A Tender—If Tonally Uneven—Study on the Stubborn Bonds Between Mothers and Daughters

    By Paul Emmanuel EnicolaJune 15, 20250

    Interview: Oscar Nominee Jessica Sanders On Her Upcoming Comedy Short, ‘I Want To Feel Fun’

    By Vidal DcostaJune 13, 20250
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    Indie Film Highlights

    ‘Sister Midnight’ Review: Sapped of All Energy, a Defiant Domestic Goddess Bites Back

    By Vidal DcostaJune 16, 20250

    Trapped in a loveless marriage and repulsed by the repetitive need to conform, Uma (Radhika…

    ‘Honeyjoon’ Tribeca Review: A Tender—If Tonally Uneven—Study on the Stubborn Bonds Between Mothers and Daughters

    By Paul Emmanuel EnicolaJune 15, 20250

    Interview: Oscar Nominee Jessica Sanders On Her Upcoming Comedy Short, ‘I Want To Feel Fun’

    By Vidal DcostaJune 13, 20250

    Tribeca Review: ‘A Tree Fell in the Woods’—But the Drama Barely Rustled

    By Paul Emmanuel EnicolaJune 12, 20250

    Indie Psychological Thriller ‘Audrey’ Releases First Trailer

    By Mark ZiobroJune 10, 20250
    Spotlight on Classic Film

    ‘Gone With the Wind’ Review: Epic Film from the Golden Age of Hollywood

    ‘The Count of Monte Cristo’ QCinema 2024 Review: A Thoughtful, If Rushed, Study of Revenge and Redemption

    ‘Thirteen Women’ Review: A Precursor of the Slasher Genre, with a Devilishly Divine Femme Fatale at its Helm

    “The Twilight Zone” Top 60 Episodes Ranked – Episodes 60-46

    The Movie Buff is a growing cinema and entertainment website devoted to covering Hollywood cinema and beyond. We cover all facets of film and television, from Netflix and Amazon Prime to theater releases and comfort favorites.

    The Movie Buff is also a leading supporter of indie film, featuring coverage of small, low-budget films and international cinema from Bollywood, Latin America, and beyond.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    Copyright @2011-2025 by The Movie Buff | Stock Photos provided by our partner Depositphotos

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.