Bright (film)
Bright is a 2017 American urban fantasy action film directed by David Ayer, written by Max Landis, and starring Will Smith, Joel Edgerton, Noomi Rapace, Lucy Fry, Édgar Ramírez, and Ike Barinholtz. The film is set in an alternate present in which humans and mythical creatures co-exist and details an LAPD police officer and his orc partner confronting racism and police corruption while protecting a magic wand and the elf girl who wields it.
Principal photography began in November 2016 in Los Angeles. The film was released worldwide on Netflix on December 22, 2017. While it has received negative reviews from critics, it has become one of Netflix's most streamed movies ever.
Plot
s coexist with other sentient races, notably orcs and elves. While Magic is known to be real, only a very few individuals called "Brights" can wield rare magic wands without dying. In Los Angeles, veteran LAPD officer Daryl Ward has been involuntarily partnered with Nick Jakoby, the nation's first orc police officer, equally detested by his brother officers for his race and other orcs for being a policeman. Ward's relationship with Jakoby has been awkward since Ward was wounded by an orc armed robber that Jakoby failed to apprehend and the LAPD's Internal Affairs division suspects Jakoby let the robber escape on purpose.One night, Ward and Jakoby respond to a disturbance at what turns out to be a safe house for the "Shield of Light", an extremist group that prophesies the return of the "Dark Lord", a semi-mythical figure from thousands of years ago who was defeated by a combined army of eight races. Inside, Ward and Jakoby apprehend the lone survivor, an elf girl named Tikka in possession of a wand.
Ward calls for backup but, the moment the four arriving officers see the wand, they try to coerce Ward into killing Jakoby and letting them steal the wand for themselves, reminding Ward that Jakoby has already betrayed him by letting the robber escape.
Ward goes outside and demands the truth about the robber. Jakoby explains that the first orc escaped from him and Jakoby mistakenly apprehended a second, younger one, then helped him escape from the arriving backup officers, knowing that they would probably gun the kid down on the spot without asking questions.
When the four officers appear behind Ward, planning to kill both him and Jakoby, Ward turns and shoots them down before they can return fire. The gunfire attracts the attention of the local Hispanic gang, whose wheelchair-using leader Poison has seen the wand and believes it can allow him to walk again. Meanwhile, rumors of the wand draw both its owner, Leilah—the leader of the radical elf sect called the Inferni—and Kandomere, an elf FBI agent assigned to the federal "Magic Task Force".
The trio flees through the territory of the Fogteeth Orc clan, disrupting its monthly rave. The gangsters corner the trio in a strip club, but are themselves killed by Leilah and her two enforcers, allowing the trio to escape again. At a service station, Ward contacts his friend Sheriff Deputy Rodriguez, whom he knows he can trust. Rodriguez contacts Kandomere and his human partner Hildebrandt Ulysses Montehugh, but their conversation is intercepted by Leilah, who attacks the service station, killing Rodriguez.
Escaping again, the trio are captured by the Fogteeth Orcs whose leader Dorghu also wants the wand. Dorghu orders his son Mikey to kill Jakoby, but Mikey reveals that he was the orc that Jakoby allowed to escape and thus refuses to kill him. Dorghu sends his son away and kills Jakoby himself. But as he prepares to kill Ward, Tikka produces the wand and uses it to resurrect Jakoby, revealing that she is a Bright. The Fogteeth's shaman pronounces this to be part of a prophecy, causing the clan to kneel to Jakoby and allow the trio to go free. Tikka, now trusting them, reveals that she speaks English and explains that the Inferni believe that assembling three wands will allow them to resurrect the Dark Lord. She was a member of the Inferni but fled the group and was sheltered by the Shield of Light. Leilah loaned her wand to a Bright assassin and sent her to kill Tikka but Tikka escaped with the wand.
Using the wand to resurrect Jakoby has made Tikka gravely ill and the only place she can be healed is a magical pool back at the safe house. They return there, but are ambushed by Leilah and her two guards. In the confrontation, Leilah's guards are killed, but Leilah holds Tikka helpless as Ward and Jakoby run out of ammunition. Ward deliberately grabs the wand, believing that the resulting explosion will kill all of them. To everyone's amazement, Ward survives handling the wand, revealing him to be a Bright as well. With a spell word from Tikka, Ward destroys Leilah, triggering an explosion that sets the building on fire. Tikka disappears and the injured Ward and Jakoby try to escape the building.
Discovering himself alone outside, Jakoby rushes back into the inferno and rescues Ward as the fire department and the ambulance arrive. Dorghu and his clan appear and perform an ancient orc ceremony signifying to Jakoby that he is now "blooded"—an orcish status only achievable by an act of great bravery. While he and Ward are rushed to the hospital, the federal agents arrive to take possession of Leilah's wand. In the hospital, Ward and Jakoby give Kandomere and Montehugh a doctored statement of the previous night's events, understanding that the federal agents want the existence of the wand and any hint of magical activity kept secret. In a public ceremony, Jakoby and Ward are honored for their brave stand against "armed terrorists" though both are disgusted that the corrupt cops are honored along with them. Ward smiles as he spots Tikka moving through the crowd in disguise.
Cast
- Will Smith as Daryl Ward, a human LAPD officer.
- Joel Edgerton as Nick Jakoby, the nation's first orc police officer, who is partnered with Daryl.
- Noomi Rapace as Leilah, an Inferni elf seeking control of the magic wand.
- Lucy Fry as Tikka, a young Inferni elf who is in possession of the magic wand.
- Édgar Ramírez as Kandomere, a high ranking elvish federal agent with the US Department of Magic's Magic Task Force.
- Ike Barinholtz as Pollard, a corrupt human LAPD officer who seeks to steal the wand for himself.
- Happy Anderson as Hildebrandt Ulysses Montehugh, a human federal agent who works under Kandomere in the Magic Task Force.
- Dawn Olivieri as Sherri Ward, Daryl's human wife and Sophia's mother.
- Matt Gerald as Hicks, a corrupt human LAPD officer.
- Margaret Cho as Ching, a corrupt human LAPD sergeant.
- Brad William Henke as Dorghu, the imposing leader of the Fogteeth Orcs gang.
- Jay Hernandez as Rodriguez, a human LASD deputy.
- Veronica Ngo as Tien, an Inferni elf enforcer working for Leilah.
- Alex Meraz as Serafin, an Inferni elf enforcer working for Leilah.
- Nadia Gray as Larika, an Inferni elf enforcer working for Leilah.
- Joseph Piccuirro as Brown, a corrupt human LAPD officer.
- Enrique Murciano as Poison, the crippled leader of the human Altamira gang who uses a wheelchair.
- Scarlet Spencer as Sophia Ward, Daryl and Sherri's human daughter.
- Andrea Navedo as Perez, a human LAPD captain and Ward's superior.
- Kenneth Choi as Yamahara, a human LAPD internal affairs detective.
- Bobby Naderi as Arkashian, a human LAPD internal affairs detective.
- Cle Shaheed Sloan as OG Mike, the Wards' human neighbor.
- Chris Browning as Serling, a human questioned by the US Department of Magic's Task Force.
- Joe Rogan as himself, he interviews an orc about Jakoby.
Production
Filming
Photos from the set were first published in November 2016. Filming was completed by February 4, 2017.Reception
Critical response
Bright received criticism for its screenplay, cinematography and excessive focus on social commentary. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 28% based on 109 reviews, with an average rating of 3.8/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Bright tries to blend fantasy, hard-hitting cop drama, and social commentary—and ends up falling painfully short of the mark on all three fronts." On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 29 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 1.5 out of 4 stars, saying: "Bright is basically a tired buddy-cop movie dressed up in bizarre trappings... It doesn’t take itself too seriously, but it’s not nearly as self-deprecating and funny as it needed to be." Writing for Rolling Stone, David Fear gave the film 1 out of 4 stars, criticizing the script and incoherent action scenes, writing: "This combo of gritty cop procedural and fantasy is a dark, dank, dumb-as-hell mess."
David Ehrlich of IndieWire gave the film an "F" and called it the worst film of 2017, saying: "There's boring, there's bad, and then there's Bright... from the director of Suicide Squad and the writer of Victor Frankenstein comes a fresh slice of hell that somehow represents new lows for them both—a dull and painfully derivative ordeal that often feels like it was made just to put those earlier misfires into perspective." Ayer responded enthusiastically to Ehrlich's review, claiming that he desired for the film to receive "a strong reaction either way."
NPR's Chris Klimek wrote: "Critics have already lined up to pillory Bright as among the year's worst releases. Don't believe the clickbait. Lazy but not boring, this Net-flick is perfectly, stubbornly mediocre, and less a chore to sit through than either of 2017's Vin Diesel vehicles."