Action thrillers live or die on pressure. The plot can be ridiculous. The villain can be thin. The conspiracy can barely make sense. None of that matters much when the chase has bite, the hero looks cornered, the violence has rhythm, and every new problem squeezes the character harder than the last one.
These six miss that basic contract in brutal ways and the worst part is how little pleasure they offer. Bad action can still be fun when the chaos has personality. These six movies make danger feel like paperwork. That’s not good. They’re that bad.
6
‘Taken 3’ (2015)
Image via 20th Century Studios
Taken 3 commits the strangest sin possible for a Taken movie: it gives Bryan Mills (Liam Neeson) plenty to do and almost nothing worth feeling. Lenore (Famke Janssen) is murdered, Bryan is framed, the police chase him, his daughter Kim (Maggie Grace) is pulled into the fallout, and Inspector Dotzler (Forest Whitaker) circles the case with bagels, rubber bands, and investigative quirks. That setup could have pushed Bryan into grief, guilt, and older-man desperation.
Instead, the movie keeps chopping everything into movement without impact. The editing fights the action so aggressively that hand-to-hand combat, car crashes, escapes, and shootouts often feel processed into fragments. Bryan still has the tired heaviness that made Bryan Mills scary in the first place, but the character no longer feels like a man using terrifying precision. He feels like an icon being dragged through franchise obligations. The first Taken had a clean emotional engine: father, daughter, time, hunt. Taken 3 replaces that clarity with a frame-up plot and action that keeps hiding its own punches. Bryan deserved a better farewell than visual confusion and reheated paranoia.
5
‘Alex Cross’ (2012)
Tyler Perry as Alex Cross looking at a photo in ‘Alex Cross’Image via Lionsgate
Alex Cross is supposed to be dangerous before he ever throws a punch. The character’s weapon is pattern recognition, emotional reading, patience, and the ability to stand close to evil without losing control. Morgan Freeman played him with calm authority in earlier adaptations. Alex Cross (Tyler Perry) steps into the role here with a harder physical approach, and that choice could have opened a new version of Cross: younger, angrier, more personally exposed.
Alex Cross never builds that version. It keeps saying Cross is brilliant while surrounding him with blunt detective work and clumsy emotional beats. The villain, Picasso (Matthew Fox), is lean, twitchy, and grotesque enough to suggest a genuinely nasty threat, yet the movie treats him more like a collection of serial-killer affectations than a mind Cross has to understand. The murder of Maria (Carmen Ejogo) should tear the story open. Instead, the grief becomes fuel for generic revenge. Tommy Kane (Edward Burns) is stuck beside Cross, watching a procedural that keeps confusing intensity with shouting. A Cross movie needs psychological pressure and this one doesn’t. Simple.
4
‘Abduction’ (2011)
Image via Lionsgate
There is a very specific kind of fake danger in Abduction, the kind where every scene insists a teenager is trapped in a massive conspiracy while nothing on screen has the sharpness to sell it. Nathan Harper (Taylor Lautner) finds his childhood photo on a missing-person website, realizes his parents may not be his parents, and ends up running with Karen (Lily Collins) while CIA agents, assassins, and buried secrets close in.
That is a clean young-man-on-the-run thriller. John Singleton knew how to direct tension, bodies, neighborhoods, anger, and momentum, which makes lifelessness even more frustrating. Nathan is asked to carry identity panic, romantic fear, martial-arts action, family trauma, and spy-thriller confusion, and the movie gives him almost no inner weather beyond wide-eyed urgency. The film wants to launch a new action hero. It barely builds a person.
3
‘Getaway’ (2013)
Image via Warner Bros.
Getaway is what happens when a car chase movie forgets that speed needs geography. The film follows Brent Magna (Ethan Hawke) , a former race driver whose wife is kidnapped by a mysterious voice. He has to steal a Shelby Mustang, follow instructions, smash through Bulgaria, and drag a young hacker known as The Kid (Selena Gomez) into the nightmare. The premise is stupid in a usable way. One driver. One hostage. One car. One night. Keep tightening the route and the movie can survive on pure momentum.
The finished film turns that simplicity into punishment. The camera placement and cutting make the driving feel chaotic without making it exciting. Streets, turns, crashes, police cars, and obstacles blur together until the chase loses any sense of escalation. Brent gives a raw panic that occasionally suggests the movie he thought he was in, while The Kid has to play attitude, fear, and tech competence inside dialogue that rarely helps her. The villain voice (Jon Voight) keeps issuing instructions, yet the threat becomes less gripping the longer it goes. A great chase thriller lets the audience feel each bad decision inside the driver’s body but Getaway mostly traps viewers in passenger-seat confusion.
Collider Exclusive · Action Hero Quiz Which Action Hero Would Be Your Perfect Partner? Rambo · James Bond · Indiana Jones · John McClane · Ethan Hunt
Five legends. Five completely different ways of getting out alive — with style, with muscle, with charm, with luck, or with a plan so intricate it probably shouldn’t work. Ten questions will reveal which action hero was built to have your back.
🎖️Rambo
🍸James Bond
🏺Indiana Jones
🔧John McClane
🎭Ethan Hunt
01
You’re dropped into a dangerous situation with no warning. What do you need most from a partner? The first few seconds tell you everything about who belongs beside you.
02
You have to get somewhere dangerous, fast. How do you travel? How you get there is half the mission.
03
You’re pinned down and outnumbered. What does your ideal partner do? This is when you find out what someone is really made of.
04
The mission is paused. You have one evening to decompress. What does your partner suggest? Who someone is when the pressure drops is who they actually are.
05
How do you prefer your partner to communicate mid-mission? Good communication is the difference between partners and a liability.
06
Your enemy is powerful, well-resourced, and has the upper hand. How should your partner approach them? The approach to the enemy defines the partnership.
07
Things go badly wrong and you’re captured. What do you trust your partner to do? Who someone is when you need them most is the only thing that matters.
08
What does your ideal partner bring to the table that you couldn’t replace? A great partner fills the gap you didn’t know you had.
09
Every partnership has a cost. Which of these can you live with? No one comes without baggage. The question is whether you can carry it together.
10
It’s the final moment. Everything is on the line. What do you need from your partner right now? The last question is the most honest one.
Your Partner Has Been Assigned Your Perfect Partner Is…
Your answers have pointed to one action hero above all others. This is the person built to have your back — for better or considerably, spectacularly worse.
Rambo
Your partner doesn’t talk much, doesn’t need to, and will have assessed every threat in your immediate environment before you’ve finished your first sentence. John Rambo is not a man of plans or politics — he is a force of nature shaped by survival, loyalty, and a capacity for endurance that goes beyond anything training can produce. He will not leave you behind. He has never left anyone behind who deserved to come home. What you get with Rambo is the most capable, most quietly ferocious partner imaginable — one who has been through things that would have broken anyone else, and who chose to keep going anyway. You’ll never need to ask if he has your back. You’ll just know.
James Bond
Your partner will arrive perfectly dressed, perfectly briefed, and with a cover story so convincing it’ll take you a moment to remember what’s actually true. James Bond is the most professionally dangerous person in any room he enters — and the most disarmingly charming, which is the point. He operates in a world of layers, where nothing is what it appears and every advantage is used without apology. You’ll never be bored. You’ll occasionally be furious. But when it matters — when the mission is genuinely on the line and the margin for error has collapsed to nothing — Bond is exactly the partner you want. He has survived things that have no business being survivable. He does it with style. That is not nothing.
Indiana Jones
Your partner will know the history, the language, the cultural context, and exactly why the thing everyone else is ignoring is actually the most important thing in the room. Indiana Jones is brilliant, reckless, and occasionally impossible — but he is also one of the most resourceful, most genuinely knowledgeable partners you could find yourself beside. He approaches every situation with a scholar’s eye and a brawler’s instinct, which is an unusual combination and a remarkably effective one. He hates snakes and gets personally attached to objects of historical significance, both of which will slow you down at least once. It doesn’t matter. What Indy brings is irreplaceable — and the adventures you’ll have together will be the kind people write books about. Assuming you survive them.
John McClane
Your partner was not supposed to be here. He does not have the right equipment, the right information, or anything approaching the right odds. He has a sarcastic remark and an absolute refusal to accept that the situation is as bad as it looks. John McClane is the greatest accidental hero in the history of action cinema — a man whose superpower is stubbornness, whose contingency plan is improvisation, and whose capacity to absorb punishment and keep moving would be alarming if it weren’t so useful. He will complain the entire time. He will make it significantly more chaotic than it needed to be. And he will absolutely, unconditionally, without question come through when it counts. Yippee-ki-yay.
Ethan Hunt
Your partner has already run seventeen scenarios by the time you’ve finished reading the briefing, and the plan he’s settled on involves at least two things that should be physically impossible. Ethan Hunt operates at the absolute edge of human capability — technically, physically, and intellectually — and he brings the same relentless precision to protecting his partners that he brings to dismantling organisations that shouldn’t exist. He is not easy to know and he will never fully tell you everything. But he will carry the weight of the mission so completely, so absolutely, that your job is simply to trust him — and the remarkable thing is that trusting him always turns out to be the right call. The mission will be impossible. He will complete it anyway.
2
‘The Cold Light of Day’ (2012)
Henry Cavill in The Cold Light of DayImage via Lionsgate
The Cold Light of Day has one of those casts that makes the actual movie feel insulting. Will Shaw (Henry Cavill) travels to Spain for a family vacation, his relatives vanish, and he learns his father Martin (Bruce Willis) has been hiding a CIA connection. Carrack (Sigourney Weaver) enters the picture with intelligence-agency danger, while Will runs through Madrid trying to recover his family and understand who is lying to him.
That combination should give the film sun-baked paranoia: foreign streets, no trust, family secrets, spies, deadlines, and a regular man realizing his father’s life was built on violence. Instead, Will spends most of the movie looking confused in ways the script never turns into character. Cavill has the build and screen presence for action, but the film gives him reaction instead of agency for far too long. Martin exits the story early enough that his presence feels like a marketing promise the movie cannot keep. Carrack is easily the most watchable person here, though even she gets trapped in a conspiracy that has no flavor. The locations are attractive, the danger is constant, and somehow the movie feels vacant. That is a special kind of failure.
1
‘Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever’ (2002)
Jeremiah Ecks (Antonio Banderas) and Sever (Lucy Liu) fight each other in a dingy industrial area in ‘Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever’ (2002).Image via Warner Bros. Pictures
A movie called Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever already sounds like it was designed by someone who thought coolness was a matter of punctuation. And that’s pretty much about it. The film follows Jeremiah Ecks (Antonio Banderas) as a former FBI agent pulled into a case involving Sever (Lucy Liu), a rogue operative connected to an abduction, a deadly microscopic weapon, and a web of intelligence betrayal. On paper, two elite killers colliding through explosions and espionage should deliver at least cheap early-2000s action pleasure.
The movie is deadening in a way that action cinema almost never survives. Ecks has charm, melancholy, and physical grace, but he is written as a hollow trench-coat figure walking through plot fog. Sever has the stare and movement to make her frightening, yet the character is trapped behind silence that never becomes mystery. The explosions are loud without being exciting. The gunfights have no rhythm. The conspiracy is both overcomplicated and weightless, which is a nightmare combination for a thriller. Even the central rivalry barely has dramatic electricity. Action fans can forgive nonsense when the bodies, weapons, and emotions connect. Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever gives them the title, the smoke, the bullets, and almost no movie underneath.
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