Angel Has Fallen Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Angel Has Fallen quiz and we will tell you which Angel Has Fallen character you are. Play it now.

“Angel Has Fallen,” a sleepy, dopey action film, is a disappointment for a variety of reasons, not just the ones you might expect. Due to the fact that it is the second sequel to “Olympus Has Fallen,” “Angel Has Fallen” does not even have a particularly high bar to overcome. It’s a by-the-numbers revenge fantasy about ruthless North Koreans and emasculated, savior-hungry Americans that’s mostly distinguished by its numerous displays of excessive violence. To put it another way, America is graphically threatened for the sake of proving a slogan coined by then-interim President Trumbull (Morgan Freeman): “As a nation, we are never stronger than when we are tested.”

“Olympus Has Fallen” is at the very least a plausible survivalist wet dream, if not a realistic one. This occurs only after the Washington Monument is toppled, the President is tied to a post, and the Secretary of Defense is punched in the face and kicked in the stomach, just before she is dragged across the floor while defiantly screaming the Pledge of Allegiance. The only thing Banning can do to defeat the North Koreans is kill a slew of bad guys without feeling sorry for himself or fearing reprisal, such as the North Korean hostage whom he shoots in the head just to spook the other North Korean agent Banning has tied up (“Your friend seemed like a funny guy,” Banning says to the other North Korean agent). “Olympus Has Fallen” isn’t a particularly good film, but I couldn’t stop myself from watching it.

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By contrast, I couldn’t wait to get away from “Angel Has Fallen,” a shaky, unfocused cash-in shot that features far too many shaky, unfocused close-ups that appear to be intended to reassure viewers of the otherwise bland drama’s superficially intense intensity. “Angel Has Fallen” is a timid lament about contemporary American trust issues (the Russians are to blame, but only almost incidentally), and it casts Banning, who is now rickety from concussion-induced migraines and insomnia, on a group of disloyal American mercenaries led by, well, you’ll figure it out soon enough.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Angel Has Fallen quiz.

In contrast to their predecessors, the creators of “Angel Has Fallen” don’t appear to be as invested in their characters (or patriotic ass-whoopings) as they were. As a result, we only get a few hesitant signs of introspection from Banning—sick, he’s has a family to protect, and an estranged father, too!—that are quickly glossed over for the sake of pumping up a few flat set pieces that look like they came straight out of the Tony Scott School of Frenzied Action Filmmaking, only they aren’t nearly as dynamic or visually appealing as Scott’s jittery photography. If you’re going to be mean-spirited and exploitative, at the very least make a convincing case for your actions.

Angel Has Fallen Quiz

It is when the filmmakers of “Angel Has Fallen” are tasked with portraying Banning as a rebel who also understands that he will eventually have to “ride a desk” to retirement that they have the most difficulty. Their Banning is more akin to John McClane in “A Good Day to Die Hard” than he is in “Die Hard 2: Die Harder,” according to the cast. Even though he complains about (and occasionally displays symptoms of) the action-movie equivalent of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), he never succumbs to those ailments, especially when he has to cut through handcuffs, light up an army of mercenaries, or flee strategically. The life of a trained ex-soldier appears to be like this: a sad, vague awareness of one’s own mortality that is mostly offset by shoot-outs, drone attacks, and improvised explosions that reinforce one’s megalomaniacal sense of one’s own worth. As a matter of fact, Banning has a critical job to perform: protecting Trumbull, a steadfast leader who has vowed to never rush our nation into war, but who also wants us to be prepared in the event that Boom Boom Go Time arrives. Banning’s moral uprightness stands in stark contrast to the film’s immoral, Russia-colluding bad guys, who are all willing to sell out their country because they miss going to war and also because they really enjoy making money.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Angel Has Fallen quiz.

If the action scenes, dialogue, characterizations, and basic plot of Banning and his values had been more carefully crafted by the film’s creators, I would have cared more about him and his values. The editing and sound design are both adequate, but that’s about all there is to it. Similarly, action scenes that over-emphasize smoke, gunfire flashes, and flying debris instead of choreography, visual coherence, or human personality only serve to hammer home the film’s general “please like me” desperation; this is also true of the film’s general “please like me” desperation. Even the scenes in which Banning’s father (no spoilers!) blows up some faceless goons come across as tacked-on and uninteresting.

About the quiz

Unlike any other scene in which great character actors like Tim Blake Nelson and Lance Reddick appear, these key moments are rushed through with little conviction and even less inspiration. The movie “Angel Has Fallen” may be entertaining if you enjoy this type of low-brow entertainment; however, that does not imply that you must purchase whatever it is that these guys are hawking.Also, you must try to play this Angel Has Fallen quiz.

For more personality quizzes check this: Angel Has Fallen Quiz.

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