Somehow, The Hitman's Wife's Bodyguard Is About Professional Licensing Requirements and EU Sanctions
A terrible movie about a bodyguard trying to regain an occupational certification.

Would you believe me if I told you The Hitman's Wife's Bodyguard, a turgid sequel to the 2017 Ryan Reynolds/Samuel L. Jackson gunfire 'n' wisecracks fest, The Hitman's Bodyguard, was actually a movie about European fiscal imbalances and occupational licensing?
No? OK, fair, I wouldn't believe me either, if I hadn't seen the movie. But I have seen the movie, and as far as I can tell it's about those things as much as it's about anything.
Which, granted, is not saying much, since this tedious procession of unfunny one-liners and listless action sequences works overtime to avoid sticking with any dramatic or thematic impulse for long. But the plot, to the extent there is one, revolves around a bodyguard (Reynolds) who has given up guns following the revocation of his professional license, teaming up with a hitman (Jackson), and the hitman's wife (Selma Hayek), to stop a terrorist (Antonio Banderas) who is threatening to destroy the European Union's power grid in response to the imposition of new sanctions on Greece. There's chaos in the streets, a monologue or two about restoring Greece to its rightful prominence as a global power, and an awful lot of bad jokes.
This isn't the sort of movie you're supposed to think about. It's such a slapdash and lazy production that it practically repels thought. Yet the movie's villain is motivated by a desire to unwind the demoralizing effects of multinational political control, and the movie's hero is driven by the hope of regaining a professional certification he views as a necessary part not only of his work but of his identity. Without a license, the movie seems to ask, is a bodyguard really a bodyguard at all? Similarly, if greater Europe can effectively control Greece's politics through external economic pressure, is Greece really a functioning country at all?
The film is not particularly interested in answering these questions, and indeed it's not even clear if the filmmakers knew they were asking them; the movie is much more concerned with staging haphazard shootouts and having Jackson and Reynolds yell four-letter-word-filled insults at each other. The movie is a loud, incoherent, and tiresome exercise in unnecessary sequel-izing, devoid of a single funny exchange or engaging action set piece.
But there is a brief glimmer of hope in one of the movie's better scenes—again, not saying much—in which Jackson, the hitman working for himself, coaches Reynolds through some profanity-laced, self-affirming talk about how he doesn't need a license to do his work.
Has he finally learned to understand that his professional worth isn't dependent on an official slip of paper? For a moment it seems so, as he regains his confidence and shoots and quips his way through the third act. Sadly, it turns he hasn't found a new way of looking at life, independent of licenses and certifications.
Instead—spoilers!—he's just found a route back to being fully licensed professional, as an Interpol agent restores his license in the movie's coda. It's a win for two things the world needs less of: international bureaucracy and occupational licensing. I warned you this movie was terrible.
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My advice don't take professional advice from career criminals.
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You had me at Selma Hayek...
The irony is that Samuel Jackson and Ryan Reynolds would probably be comedy gold in the MCU.
"Deadpool Vs: The Avengers"
Nick Fury, Jr.: "Say 'What's In Your Wallet?' again!! C'mon!! Say it!!!"
Deadpool: "Uh, actually, I can do this all day long. It's not like you can kill me."
It's a win for two things the world needs less of: international bureaucracy and occupational licensing. I warned you this movie was terrible.
You're proposing he make some kind of... Hit Man Exit from the international bureaucracy? A... Hexit if you will.
Does Ryan Reynolds get one in the ass from Salma Hayek this time?
Well now I wanna see it