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ActionThriller

Kandahar

- The only thing more dangerous than the mission is the escape.

After his mission is exposed, an undercover CIA operative stuck deep in hostile territory in Afghanistan must fight his way out, alongside his Afghan translator, to an extraction point in Kandahar, all whilst avoiding elite enemy forces and foreign spies tasked with hunting them down.

Release Date : 2023-05-25

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Thunder RoadG-BASEMBC StudiosCapstone Pictures

Production Country : United Arab EmiratesUnited States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Gerard Butler

Character Name : Tom Harris

Original Name : Gerard Butler

Gender : Male

Navid Negahban

Character Name : Mohammad 'Mo' Doud

Original Name : Navid Negahban

Gender : Male

Travis Fimmel

Character Name : Roman Chalmers

Original Name : Travis Fimmel

Gender : Male

Ali Fazal

Character Name : Kahil Nasir

Original Name : Ali Fazal

Gender : Male

Bahador Foladi

Character Name : Farzad Asadi

Original Name : Bahador Foladi

Gender : Male

Nina Toussaint-White

Character Name : Luna Cujai

Original Name : Nina Toussaint-White

Gender : Female

Mark Arnold

Character Name : Mark Lowe

Original Name : Mark Arnold

Gender : Male

Corey Johnson

Character Name : Chris Hoyt

Original Name : Corey Johnson

Gender : Male

Hakeem Jomah

Character Name : Rasoul

Original Name : Hakeem Jomah

Gender : Male

Tom Rhys Harries

Character Name : Oliver Altman

Original Name : Tom Rhys Harries

Gender : Male

Ray Haratian

Character Name : Ismail Rabbani

Original Name : Ray Haratian

Gender : Male

Elnaaz Norouzi

Character Name : Shina Asadi

Original Name : Elnaaz Norouzi

Gender : Female

Olivia-Mai Barrett

Character Name : Ida Harris

Original Name : Olivia-Mai Barrett

Gender : Female

Rebecca Calder

Character Name : Corrine Harris

Original Name : Rebecca Calder

Gender : Female

Vassilis Koukalani

Character Name : Bashar

Original Name : Βασίλης Κουκαλάνι

Gender : Male

Farzad Bagheri

Character Name : Parshand

Original Name : Farzad Bagheri

Gender : Male

Ross Berkeley Simpson

Character Name : English Newscaster 1

Original Name : Ross Berkeley Simpson

Gender : Male

Lee Comley

Character Name : English Newscaster 2

Original Name : Lee Comley

Gender : Male

Najia Khaan

Character Name : Nahal Hosseini

Original Name : Najia Khaan

Gender : Male

Reem AlHabib

Character Name : Adela Doud

Original Name : Reem AlHabib

Gender : Female

Fahim Fazli

Character Name : Taliban commander

Original Name : Fahim Fazli

Gender : Male

Darius Radac

Character Name : Stuart Sutherland

Original Name : Darius Radac

Gender : Male

Reviews

L

Leno

@fLeno

2023-05-17

A CIA agent in Afghanistan has to try escape the hostile territory when his disguise is blown. If you apply some suspension of disbelief to accept that it would be possible to a single man to survive being followed by an army of enemies, Kandahar is actually a quite well-made movie! Very contemporary, following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, the movie does a good job showing the hostile atmosphere where different factions (Taliban, I.S.I.S, and the Iranian government) fight each other but have a common hatred towards the western interference. Definitely worth watching, especially if you enjoy "war escape" movies.

M

MovieGuys

@MovieGuys

2023-06-23

Yet another military pot boiler, starring, once again, Gerard Butler. Kandahar pretends to be open and inclusive. There's a modest plug for nationalism/patriotism, from the perspective of different nations.That said, this film is essentially about saving a man who commits a pretty awful act of terrorism, in another nation, at the behest of the CIA. Its quite watchable, there's a lot of serviceable action. That' said, its hard to overlook the predictable marketing of US/UK exceptionalism as "A-OK". Sorry but as far as this viewers concerned, it's anything but "OK". In summary, a pro Western military action flick. Quite watchable in its own way but as they say "it is what it is". There's no changing that.

L

LORDHEWA21

@LORDHEWA21

2023-06-19

The Best

L

Louisa Moore - Screen Zealots

@screenzealots

2023-08-04

Gerard Butler is an actor who knows his strengths and takes roles that play to them, and his charismatic lead performance is one of the best things about “Kandahar,” a military action thriller about undercover CIA operative Tom (Gerard Butler) who is stuck deep in hostile territory in Afghanistan with his translator, Mo (Navid Negahban). It’s vaguely familiar to this year’s “The Covenant” from Guy Ritchie, yet the two films are very different. Here, the two men must work together to avoid the elite special forces unit that has been tasked with hunting them down after their mission is exposed. The plot is very by-the-book and simple, but Mitchell LaFortune’s script features thoughtful writing with a politically-minded slant. There’s a lot of conversational drama that feels draggy in parts (and a lot of it is offset by massive explosions and flashy shootouts), but the screenplay is not mindless. It’s exhausting to keep track of the roster of characters and factions and how they are working with or against each other, but the focus on the narrative is the relationship between Mo and Tom and their will to survive. Their friendship is crucial to the story, but you must suspend disbelief because there’s no way these two would develop such a close bond in such a short amount of time. The film is well cast and features solid performances from all involved, which in turn helps create a stronger emotional bond between the audience and the characters. The stakes are high and the danger feels real, which makes every shootout affecting and tense. You’ll genuinely root for these guys to make it out alive, but getting to their final extraction point quickly becomes a dicey proposition. Director Ric Roman Waugh, who worked with Butler on “Angel Has Fallen” and “Greenland” is perfectly acceptable behind the camera, but the too-dark cinematography and annoying overuse of shaky handheld cameras are both extremely aggravating as a viewer. The monotonous chase – shoot – repeat formula grows tiresome very quickly. Despite its somewhat predictable story, “Kandahar” tries to tackle some sophisticated commentary about the cycle of violence and war in the Middle East. This makes it a decent (if forgettable) movie where the action scenes come with a dose of emotional weight, and not just explosions for the sake of empty entertainment.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-08-14

When a CIA mission goes awry, agent "Harris" (Gerard Butler) finds himself stuck in Afghanistan with his interpreter "Parshand" (Farhad Bagheri) and with his identity now on the open market! As you might expect, the next two hours is spent on the usual, derivative, cat and mouse antics as they try to stay one step ahead of pursuing warlords, mercenaries and - well, luckily, I don't actually have a gun! It's so formulaic and unnecessary this film and by half an hour in there isn't the slightest hint of jeopardy, nor much respect for an ancient culture that is treated as if it were just another outing for an American political and military establishment that treats all parts of the world as if they were extensions of Texas. The dialogue is banal and a bit like after his last outing - "Plane" (2023) we really ought to be telling Mr. Butler to hang up his rifle and leave well alone. Nothing at all new here, and it really is a bit of a waste of time.

H

hamfaceman

@hamfaceman

2024-01-06

Another okay Butler action movie, but a little low on the action part. They tried to make the main villain guy way too "cool" and he just ended up seeming like a bad anime character. Bunch of white savior stuff going on here and some comments could be made about how the translator wouldn't need saving by the US if not for the US in the first place. Ummm, ya, whatever, looking forward to more Butler! You can put this ham on your face if you want, but it's a bit slimy.

B

BornKnight

@BornKnight

2024-01-19

From the director of "Greenland", Ric Roman Waugh has an established style of working, this time again with Gerard Butler. This action-thriller from the starter writer Mitchell LaFortune doesn't fall far from other films of this genre that became a trend lately (the relation of black-ops agents or soldiers and the translators that follows them, many times not credited from the danger they expose themselves from). But is is a solid movie with far distance and expansive shots of landscape, another mark of the director that used the spanish MacGregor cinematographer (The Fall) for this work, filmed in in Saudi Arabia, being the first big-budget U.S. feature to shoot in the country's Al-Ula and Jeddah. Solid action scenes and the interesting fact of being one of the few movie's that I'd view that shows the complexity of faction in the region, between Taliban, ISISK, Warlord and even the Iranian and Paquistan on the frontier. It had potential to be more, but it is worth the watch: 6.5 out of 10.0 / B-.