Man Without a Clue: Liam Neeson gets his Jason Bourne on in the semi-absurd thriller Unknown. Pictured with Diane Kruger, fabulous in Inglorious Basterds, the  couple goes on the hunt for identity.

Man Without a Clue: Liam Neeson gets his Jason Bourne on in the semi-absurd thriller Unknown. Pictured with Diane Kruger, fabulous in Inglorious Basterds, the couple goes on the hunt for identity.

Unknown

Identity spy thriller stays afloat in homage to the Bourne flicks.

How Liam Neeson went from being that rare thespian animal of a leading-man-character-actor to a full-on action star while still keeping his artistic integrity is a mystery. It’s certainly more than Nicolas Cage could do. The phenomenon probably remains a mystery even to Neeson himself. In his indispensable Biographical Dictionary of Film, David Thomson says of the actor from Northern Ireland, “There’s something not quite right about Liam Neeson.” The puzzling quality Thomson refers to is the actor’s baffling ability to inhabit characters with a burning sense of intelligent urgency shielded behind his pale blue eyes. Just think about Liam Neeson’s indelible title roles in films as far ranging as Schindler’s List and Kinsey. We watch the timing of his character’s thoughts and understand everything about him at once. He’s an actor who naturally inspires his audience to believe in his character, regardless of the narrative parameters. Genre is no barrier. Liam Neeson is equally at home in a western (see Seraphim Falls) or a historic period drama (see Michael Collins). That he frequently returns to the theatrical stage, contributes to the thrilling command of his craft.

Unknown is a fish-out-of-water mystery thriller. What makes it entertaining from start to finish is Liam Neeson’s performance. He plays Dr. Martin Harris, an American botanist visiting Berlin with his wife Liz (January Jones) for a biotechnology summit. A forgotten briefcase sends the good doctor in a taxi back to the Berlin airport. Snow is on the ground. Fate intervenes when Martin’s cab careens off a bridge into the frigid waters below. His driver, a quick-thinking Bosnian immigrant named Gina (Diane Kruger), saves Martin from certain death, but not from a coma. Four days later, Martin awakens with enough memory intact to retrace his steps back to his hotel where the biotech convention is underway. Still, Martin’s lost personal identification proves a considerable hurdle to gaining access to his peers. When Martin finally convinces a hotel staffer to escort him to his wife, she doesn’t recognize him. To make matters worse there’s an imposter (played by Aidan Quinn) who claims to be Liz’s husband.

Martin tracks down Gina to help him. Gina’s thick Eastern European accent creates romantic tension that the characters play against rather than fall prey to. Piecing together Martin’s actual identity means surviving several zigzagging car chases and deadly attacks by foreign assassins.

Director Jaume Collet-Serra (Orphan) revs up the ferocity of the action set pieces to a fever pitch. Even the hospital where Martin recovered provides no refuge. Berlin is a nightmare trap. We are in the thick of an absurdist spy puzzle. The solution to Unknown’s mystery is excessively contrived and yet underdeveloped. Though the story stalls in its miscalculated third act, Bruno Ganz supplies a chewy supporting turn as former Stasi officer Ernst Jürgen. In the three or four scenes he has, Ganz injects welcome life into the film with resourceful line readings that brim with evocative color. If his character’s gritty sub-plot proves to be a dead-end, at least it’s a closure as satisfying as Liam Neeson’s portrayal of a mysterious man not far removed from a spy like Jason Bourne.

UNKNOWN (2) • Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra • Starring Liam Neeson, Diane Kruger, January Jones •Rated PG-13 • 113 min •At Century Cinemas Del Monte, Maya Cinemas, Northridge Cinemas, Lighthouse Cinemas.

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