Movie Review: Mark Wahlberg and Halle Berry Lead a Middling Spy Comedy in ‘The Union’

 Mark Wahlberg, left, and Halle Berry, cast members in "The Union," pose together at the premiere of the Netflix film at the Egyptian Theatre, Monday, Aug. 12, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP)
Mark Wahlberg, left, and Halle Berry, cast members in "The Union," pose together at the premiere of the Netflix film at the Egyptian Theatre, Monday, Aug. 12, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP)
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Movie Review: Mark Wahlberg and Halle Berry Lead a Middling Spy Comedy in ‘The Union’

 Mark Wahlberg, left, and Halle Berry, cast members in "The Union," pose together at the premiere of the Netflix film at the Egyptian Theatre, Monday, Aug. 12, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP)
Mark Wahlberg, left, and Halle Berry, cast members in "The Union," pose together at the premiere of the Netflix film at the Egyptian Theatre, Monday, Aug. 12, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP)

“The Union,” an action comedy with Mark Wahlberg and Halle Berry, should have been more fun. Or more exciting. It certainly had a lot working in its favor, including big stars and a budget for globetrotting. But it’s lacking a certain charm that could help it be something more than the Netflix movie playing in the background.

“The Union,” streaming Friday, is a fairy tale — a very male one, about a middle-aged everyman (Wahlberg) whose life never quite got started and who gets recruited to be a spy out of the blue. Mike is a broke construction worker still living in his hometown of Patterson, New Jersey (yes, there are Springsteen songs) with his mother and hanging with his old friends in bars.

That’s all to say that for Mike, it is a breath of fresh air when his old high school girlfriend Roxanne (Berry), walks into the bar one evening looking like a punk-rock superhero in a leather motorcycle jacket. Glamorous and confident and never bothered by the flop of hair getting in her eyes, she has clearly found a life outside Patterson.

The problem, or a problem, I think, is that we already know what she does. Instead of putting the audience in Mike’s shoes, as the fish out of water trying to figure out why he’s woken up in a luxury suite in London after meeting his high school ex in his hometown bar, “The Union” starts on Roxanne. It begins with a kind of “Mission: Impossible”-style extraction gone wrong, in Trieste, Italy, where most of her team ends up dead. She decides that they need some working class grit to reboot.

The idea for the movie came from Stephen Levinson, Wahlberg’s longtime business partner, who together helped bring another middle-of-the-road Netflix action-comedy to life in “Spenser Confidential.” It's directed very basically by Julian Farino, a journeyman who helmed many episodes of “Entourage,” and written by Joe Barton and David Guggenheim. And there is a sort of charming fantasy about the notion that anyone could be a moderately successful international spy given the opportunity and a few weeks of training. In the movies, women get to find out they’re secret royalty and men get to find out they’re secretly great spies.

But “The Union” never quite hits its stride tonally. It’s not silly enough to be a comedy, though I think that’s what it would prefer to be. J.K. Simmons is given too little to work with as the head of this secret agency, which also employs underwritten characters played by Jackie Earle Haley, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje and Alice Lee. One of the more moderately successful running jokes is that Mike’s undercover character is from Boston (get it?). A hulking English henchman even has a heart-to-heart with him about “Good Will Hunting.”

Berry and Wahlberg are fine together, with an easy rapport, but zero chemistry. This would not be problem if the movie wasn’t also trying to be a will-they-won’t-they romance between a woman who forgot her roots and a guy who needs to. I never quite bought into the idea that either of them are actually still thinking about their high school relationship and what went wrong. There’s been a lot of life in the interim to dwell on decisions you made at 17. Not everyone can be Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn, or even Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton – but maybe in this case the story should have changed to serve its actors better.

That's a nitpick for something with much larger problems. And ultimately “The Union” suffers the fate of many high-priced streaming movies before it: There’s just not enough there — action, comedy, romance, art — to demand (or, rather, earn) your full attention.



Harrison Ford, Angela Bassett, Miley Cyrus and More Honored as Disney Legends at Ceremony 

Honorees Angela Bassett, David Cameron, Joe Rhode, Miley Cyrus, Frank Oz, Harrison Ford, Mark Henn, Jamie Lee Curtis, James L. Brooks, Kelly Ripa, Colleen Atwood and Martha Blanding pose onstage at the 2024 Disney Legends Awards during Disney's D23 Expo in Anaheim, California, US, August 11, 2024. (Reuters)
Honorees Angela Bassett, David Cameron, Joe Rhode, Miley Cyrus, Frank Oz, Harrison Ford, Mark Henn, Jamie Lee Curtis, James L. Brooks, Kelly Ripa, Colleen Atwood and Martha Blanding pose onstage at the 2024 Disney Legends Awards during Disney's D23 Expo in Anaheim, California, US, August 11, 2024. (Reuters)
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Harrison Ford, Angela Bassett, Miley Cyrus and More Honored as Disney Legends at Ceremony 

Honorees Angela Bassett, David Cameron, Joe Rhode, Miley Cyrus, Frank Oz, Harrison Ford, Mark Henn, Jamie Lee Curtis, James L. Brooks, Kelly Ripa, Colleen Atwood and Martha Blanding pose onstage at the 2024 Disney Legends Awards during Disney's D23 Expo in Anaheim, California, US, August 11, 2024. (Reuters)
Honorees Angela Bassett, David Cameron, Joe Rhode, Miley Cyrus, Frank Oz, Harrison Ford, Mark Henn, Jamie Lee Curtis, James L. Brooks, Kelly Ripa, Colleen Atwood and Martha Blanding pose onstage at the 2024 Disney Legends Awards during Disney's D23 Expo in Anaheim, California, US, August 11, 2024. (Reuters)

Disney bestowed "legends" status on 14 artists, including Harrison Ford, Angela Bassett and Miley Cyrus, who have shaped the company.

The honorees, who the company says have had a "significant impact" on Disney’s legacy, include director James Cameron, iconic film composer John Williams, Jamie Lee Curtis and Kelly Ripa, among several others.

This year's class of Disney Legends was inducted into the company's version of the hall of fame in a ceremony Sunday at The Honda Center in Anaheim, California, as a part of the D23 fan convention. Ryan Seacrest hosted the show, which will be available to stream Monday on Disney+.

Ford, who was the first to accept the award, called himself an "assistant storyteller," noting the many contributions of his collaborators to his career. He got emotional as he thanked Disney CEO Bob Iger, who presented him with the award, for his professional guidance and friendship.

The "Indiana Jones" and "Star Wars" actor will have his signature and handprints done up again more than 20 years after he was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The revered actor is joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the upcoming "Captain America: Brave New World."

Cyrus got emotional as she accepted the award after country singer Lainey Wilson warmed the crowd up with a rousing performance of "The Best of Both Worlds" from Cyrus' breakout show, "Hannah Montana."

"Legends get scared, too. I'm scared right now, but the difference is we do it anyway. All of you can do that every single day. It's legendary to be afraid and do it anyway," Cyrus said. "There's no such thing as failure when you try."

The "Flowers" singer, who rose to fame after starring as the titular popstar in "Hannah Montana" in 2006, is the youngest recipient of the Legends honor. Following her time on the sitcom, Cyrus has had a long-running career in music, winning her first Grammy Award in February.

Bassett, who appeared in "Black Panther" and "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever," reunited with the film's director, Ryan Coogler, who presented her with the honor. Bassett also stars in ABC’s "9-1-1."

"To the fans, you are the magic," Bassett said. "There are not enough words to let you know how much I appreciate you, how much I love you. I stand here today because you bought the tickets, you have watched the television shows, you have cheered me on my best days and lifted me up on the more difficult ones."

Lindsay Lohan and Jodie Foster joined forces to present Curtis with her award. Foster said her "bestie" was "inventive, fearless and full of surprises" before bestowing old-fashioned Mickey Mouse ears upon Curtis.

"Legends aren't born, they're created," Curtis said. "They're created and nurtured and taught and educated and then they make art and then we connect."

Curtis has appeared in her share of projects under The Walt Disney Studios banner, from "Beverly Hills Chihuahua" to "You Again." She is set to reprise her role in the upcoming sequel of the fan-favorite movie "Freaky Friday," opposite Lohan. Curtis and Lohan surprised fans at Friday’s D23 presentation and shared a first look at "Freakier Friday."

Ford stepped back out on stage to honor Williams, who created the iconic scores of Ford's "Indiana Jones" and "Star Wars" movies, as well as "Jurassic Park" and "Jaws," among several others. Williams has created the "soundtrack of our lives," Ford said.

The Pacific Symphony performed a medley of music Williams, who was not in attendance, composed specially for the occasion.

Kate Winslet and Zoe Saldana, the stars of "Titanic" and "Avatar," respectively, teamed up to celebrate James Cameron.

"It’s a dream come true," Cameron said of being in a group with his fellow honorees. "There’s just such an incredible display of creativity and imagination here tonight and I’m just happy to be in this crowd, to be part of this club and part of the Disney family tonight."

ABC talk show host and mainstay Ripa reunited with her former co-host Seacrest as he introduced her to accept her honor. Her career at the television network spans over 30 years and she now hosts "Live with Kelly and Mark" with her husband, Mark Consuelos.

"It is a very rare thing, anybody can tell you in this industry, to be employed consistently in this industry, but to be employed by the same company for 34 years is my great good fortune," Ripa said. "I owe everything to Disney."

Danny DeVito, one of director James L. Brooks’ long-running collaborators and friends, presented the "Simpsons" and "Mary Tyler Moore Show" creator with the award, calling him a "genius."

"There will never be another writer, director, producer, like my dear friend," DeVito said.

Disney also honored six behind-the-scenes creatives who have contributed to groundbreaking films, art and Disney experiences.

Those honorees include Colleen Atwood, an Oscar-winning costume designer; Mark Henn, a prominent animator known for his work animating several Disney princesses; Steve Ditko, the late comics artist known for characters such as Spider-Man and Doctor Strange; Frank Oz, a noted puppeteer of "Muppets" characters and a filmmaker; Martha Blanding, a longtime manager at The Walt Disney Company and Disneyland, and Joe Rohde, a former Disney Imagineer.

Previous Disney Legends include Elton John, Steve Jobs, Betty White, Dick Van Dyke, Robert Downey Jr. and Whoopi Goldberg. They are among more than 300 honorees since the program’s inception in 1987.