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This movie follows a group of skilled mercenaries as they find themselves betrayed by the US government and are forced to fight their way out of an ambush by a new, and lethal team of human droids.
Utterly dull thriller "Drone" tries to raise ethical and moral questions about modern warfare, but the audience can only dwell on the illogical plot and unsympathetic characters - if they can engage at all.
Instead of wrestling with the morality of remote-controlled warfare like 2015's Eye in the Sky, a thriller starring Helen Mirren, Drone is a nuclear-family-sized version of Death and the Maiden.
It's a paper-thin thriller that positions itself as a movie about the consequences of drone warfare, but it's really just a threadbare domestic drama with delusions of contemporary relevance.
In this polemical drama, a military contractor who works from the safety of his home office is confronted by the brutal reality of what he does for a living.
Goes off on a few too many tangents, but its core theme comes through by the time the credits roll. Whether its worth waiting for it to hit though is a different story.