White House Down
In
"White House Down," Channing Tatum plays John Cale, a Capitol Hill police
officer, Afghanistan vet and divorcé. He can't make the grade of security guard
for the President because he was a bit of a slacker, as his Secret Service
interviewer (Maggie Gyllenhaal) reminds him. So it's a sad moment when he
has to pick up his waiting daughter Emily (Joey King). Skipping over the bad news, he instead
offers a White House tour. Suddenly a paramilitary force commandeers the place
and threatens to start World War III. Wrong place, right time for Cale, as he
becomes the de facto presidential protector after all, though in the extreme
straddle position of having to cover the President and rescue Emily when she is
taken hostage.
Regret
is a great motivator. I'd like to have one of these guilt-driven security
guys protecting me: Clint Eastwood in "In The Line of Fire" (1993)
who failed to save the life of John F. Kennedy; "Olympus Has Fallen"
bodyguard (Gerard Butler), who did rescue the president, but not the
first lady; Channing Tatum specifically, for every "Sexiest Man
Alive" reason, plus his dance-trained agility and his desire to
impress and bond with his estranged daughter.
In
other near-clone comparisons, you can't help but think the "Die
Hard"
franchise, with its alienated kids (as in the latest "Die Hard,"
Emily even calls her father John for a while before breaking through to "Dad.") The "Die
Hard" franchise has so run its course that the only real pleasure left is
finding out how much punishment McClane can take. Cale doesn't get as
brutalized by battle as John McClane, though he takes many knocks.
In
"White House Down," the wisecracks are spread out, Tatum being too
much of a sweetheart type to deliver all of them. The evil computer genius who
gains control of Norad squeals "Don't touch my toys." When the
President and Cale commandeer the Presidential limo (quite a car chase
upgrade!), and after Sawyer remembers the backseat will not be appropriate for
riding shotgun, he starts shooting. "That's something you don't see every
day" says an amazed aide, watching from afar. The script, by James Vanderbilt of "The Amazing Spider-Man," is hip. Bad enemy boys can be
diabetic; a White House tour guide (a truly witty turn by Nicolas Wright) begs the marauders to be careful of the
national artifacts.
President
Sawyer, as imagined by Foxx, is a lot of fun ("I'm not doin' that
shit!" he yells, watching Cale working some dangerous cables in the
elevator shaft they're trapped in). Expressing a deeply humane political
vision, yet with a true politician's common touch, the president also offers
Nicorette most graciously. Any resemblance to the current resident of the White
House is intentional. Sawyer and Cale get nearly equal screen time, bonding as
action heroes together against the world.
Gyllenhaal
initially strikes the right tone as Agent Finnerty, coolly turning down Cale,
but watching empathetically as he exits. Note to the New Woman: it's one way to
handle professional duties with aplomb while letting your nurturing side show a
bit. Yet after the take-over, and in a secret bunker/War Room, she issues
orders like a zonked out zombie. James Woods gives a bravura performance as her boss, the
head of Secret Service with his own frightening secrets that drive the film;
but even here there is a light touch, as we watch him reaching for his
Lorazepam.
The
special effects are scary-hairy enough to satisfy the midsummer "I wish to
go to the moon" impulse. Emmerich has his regular crew on board:
cinematographer Anna Foerster, and his visual effects team of Volker Engel
and Marc Weiger. They deliver the swirl of terror, smash-ups and imminent
disaster. CGI can be spectacular for the seven plagues; of course it works
in the action film, too. For this viewer, though, the good news is there's less
of it than feared, and a few touches are quite clever. An airplane demolishment
takes you by surprise with a sly film history reference.
"White
House Down" is still too gun-happy, and too long, but however you feel
about the Oval Office, our country, or some of the movie's jingoism, young
Emily is worth rescuing. King is an actress who can show courage, loyalty and
justifiable fear without ever getting maudlin, and her Emily is the true hero
of "White House Down," unbelievably brave, though you still believe
her. Like all kids these days, she's a whiz at technology and picture-taking
even in the most dire circumstances. She makes you hopeful about the generation
which will lead the country soon enough.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar