The Baker
Canada
3648 people rated An elderly baker must do everything he can to protect his granddaughter from gangsters.
Action
Crime
Drama
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
Abolade abiodun
10/08/2024 05:02
I love this movie
mmoshaya
21/07/2024 06:54
The Baker-1080P
manmohan
18/07/2024 20:07
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Cynthia Marie Joëlle
16/07/2024 11:54
The Baker-480P
Solomone Kone
16/07/2024 11:54
The Baker-360P
CAYLA_COETZEE19
27/05/2024 11:56
The entertaining but suspenseful crime thriller "The Baker" adds nothing new to the genre of one guy against an army of killers. Indeed, "Padre" director Jonathan Sobol retreads all the usual cliches but delivers them with satisfying results. The relationship between an older man, Pippi (Ron Perlman of "Nightmare Alley"), and his young granddaughter Delphi (Emma Ho of "Code") harkens back to Luc Besson's top-notch French thriller "The Professional" about a veteran assassin and a young girl with a potted plant. Not surprisingly, Ron Perlman is superb as an elderly, tight-lipped, white-haired galoot who lives a peaceful life. Naturally, since Pippi is a baker, Sobol introduces him to audiences as he plies his trade before we're given a glimpse of his displays of devastating combat skills. As the plot thickens, Pippi sheds his image of a regular, 9 to 5 guy and emerges as an invincible but charismatic "John Wick" type protagonist. Before we're introduced to him, we meet a far younger fellow, Peter (Joel David Moore of "Avatar"), cruising around in a car with his adorable, little daughter, in her colorful school uniform. She saw her mom die in an unfortunate auto accident because mom neglected to wear her seat belt. Indeed, this movie has a useful message: buckle up. At the start of this yarn, Peter barges into her school, pulls her out of class, and drives her to visit his estranged father. Peter has some unfinished business to attend to and wants Pippi to babysit her. Turns out Peter witnessed a drug deal gone bad in an airport parking lot in an anonymous metropolis. Conveniently, the pugnacious ruffians slaughter each other and leave behind a bag of narcotics that one junkie refers to after the fact as "Nova." Later, Pippi fields a telephone call from Peter and hears what his training has taught him to recognize as a .38 caliber pistol being discharged.
When he cannot catch up with his son, Pippi contacts the police, specifically Detective Petra Weintrager (Samantha Kaine of "The Retirement Plan"), but gets no satisfaction from his interview with her. Of course, our diligent protagonist checks the morgue, but doesn't find Peter stretched out on a slab. Later, Pippi examines the small, pink packets of narcotics that Peter found and heads for the skid row section of town to learn more about it. A couple of ill-prepared hooligans attempt to tackle him, but our hero disposes of these two in short order. Making various inquiries, he tracks the drugs down to a nightclub run by a brawny Ukrainian character with facial tattoos. In the men's room, where an attendant stands by to assist customers, Pippi bribes the attendant for his jacket. He catches this vicious-looking Ukrainian off guard, and they tangle in a knockdown, drag out fistfight. Now, I have nothing against Ukrainians, and I wonder why the filmmakers identified this fellow as a Ukrainian. Nevertheless, they tear up all the toilet stalls and shatter the mirror. By now, the chief villain, The Merchant (Harvey Keitel of "Reservoir Dogs"), puts pressure on his top enforcer, Vic (Elias Koteas of "Shutter Island"), to recover his stolen narcotics. Everything focuses on the drugs that Peter appropriated from the dead henchmen. The accidental acquisition of narcotics in "The Baker" reminded me of Tony Scott's romantic thriller "True Romance," where the hero mistakenly identified a duffel bag of narcotics for his girlfriend's clothing. Pippi's search for his son plunges him down the mean streets of the underworld. If you've seen any of the scores of tough guy tales where the hero can self-medicate himself after he receiving several severe knife wounds, "The Baker" rises to the occasion and leaves a good taste in your mouth.
Cephas Asare
27/05/2024 11:56
Ron Perlman is The Baker, a literal baker who was once some kind of special forces badass and jumps back into action when his limo driver son (Joel David Moore) is murdered by vicious mobsters. It's familiar territory in the action genre; usually guys like Steven Seagal or Jason Statham go in for this sort of thing but it's refreshing to see a fantastic character actor like Ron, usually sidelined in smaller roles, get a front and centre action lead. He has good chemistry with his now orphaned granddaughter (Emma Ho) he must look after and some well acted scenes with the bad guys, both the head mafioso (Harvey Keitel) and his put-upon lieutenant (always nice to see Elias Koteas). I wish I had better things to say about the film as a whole because the intention is there, but the execution ends up being pretty sloppy and doesn't really flow from scene to scene. It's a shame because Perlman is terrific, there's a really stirring score and some genuinely effective cinematic moments. It's just not consistent enough though, which ends up being really frustrating.
⠀SONIX ♋️
27/05/2024 11:56
This was ok. Could have been better without so much of the kid. I get that she is part of the story, fine, but why make her such an annoying little B and give her so much screen time? Oh, and she doesnt speak....thats always nice and really makes for good viewing. NOT.
The story is nothing new, but its simple enough to work....loser gets in trouble with some bad guys, family gets dragged in, blah blah blah.
Perlman is as good as expected. Koteas and Keitel the same. No real substance here, a few jumps and gaps, some weird over character development with Koteas, but just a decent action crime gig. Nothing I'd ever watch again.
DJ Fresh SA
27/05/2024 11:56
When the movie started, I was thinking to myself that it kind of felt familiar. It was almost like somebody had binged watched some early
Steven Seagal
movies like
Above the Law (1988)
and
Hard to Kill (1990)
, and then thought up this story. Wasn't bad, just a little slow. The action wasn't that bad,
Ron Perlman
aka The Baker, did a reasonable job portraying his character. Old school baddie,
Harvey Keitel
was his usual self and matched his character too. Vic (
Elias Koteas
) played the tortured number two. If you are expecting a movie similar to
Taken (2008)
or the fast action of
Liam Neeson
, you won't find it here.
Overall, a solid above average movie. I would recommend at least one watch.
mtantoush77
27/05/2024 11:56
The Baker
We had a blistering start to the movie, what a beginning. Ron Perlman just oozed menace and Joel David Moore (Norm from Avatar) turned out a class act, albeit brief.
As a movie this was a page turner, it was script light and heavy on the action. In short it was a great thriller and yes, we had a few scenes that stretched credulity, but overall it was gripping.
I am not sure why some "critics" on here can't see the simple joy in this story about a grandfather protecting his family that was very well done, not to mention the great direction and great music.
I'm giving this a firm 6 outta 10 for a strong entertaining movie.