Gosling’s ‘Only God Forgives’ slowly warms up the silverscreen

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After scoring a runaway hit with the gritty 2011 thriller “Drive,” actor Ryan Gosling and director Nicolas Winding Refn are re-teaming for another synth-pop infused romp in “Only God Forgives.” Set in a neon-drenched Bangkok, the film follows the drug-smuggling Julian (Gosling), whose unhinged mother (Kristin Scott Thomas) convinces him to avenge the murder of his brother. (A plot which Gosling told MTV News reminded him of a certain video game.) Yet, while “Drive” sped into critical-darling territory following its debut at the Cannes International Film Festival, “Only God Forgives” seems to be stalled at the start. Check out what the critics have to say. Only God Forgives’ doesn’t have a script so much as a body count. Its characters, even the one played by Gosling (his name is Julian), don’t pretend to be more than one-note abstractions. Julian’s brother kills a teenage prostitute, and is then murdered for the crime, at which point his dragon-lady mother, Crystal (Kristin Scott Thomas), shows up. The seedy, neon-lit Bangkok streets are depicted as a place of depravity and no mercy but also martinet control, in which Chang must restore order by taking vengeance on Crystal’s war of vengeance The last time the Danish director manned the wheel of a Ryan Gosling vehicle, the result was a near-masterpiece of genre hybridization. So it’s more than a little disappointing to report that ‘Only God Forgives,’ the pair’s second collaboration, is no ‘Drive.’ In fact, it sometimes plays like a grotesque parody of that 2011 triumph, with Refn amping up the limb-slashing, head-bashing savagery and filtering out all traces of doomed-romantic grandeur. The results are sometimes striking, in pure visual terms, but rarely engaging; even as a brutish saga of underworld retribution, the film fails to get the heart pounding. Gosling’s ability to riff on the exalting of the male body has been reduced to prosaic stares and barely the semblance of personality …