Battleship (FILM REVIEW)
Battleship
Film Review
by Kam Williams
International Armada Defends Earth from Aliens in Epic Naval Showdown
Though ostensibly inspired by the Hasbro
board game of the same name, Battleship is a special f/x-driven, sci-fi
adventure that actually has much more in common with bombastic blockbusters like
Armageddon (1998), Transformers (2007) and Independence Day (1996). To its
credit, this variation on the theme does devote considerable attention to developing
a back story before letting all hell break loose.
That
gives the audience a reason to care about the characters upon the breakout of
war with bloodthirsty invaders from outer space. Another positive is director Peter
Berg’s capable cast, led by veteran thespian Liam
Neeson, Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgard and Brooklyn Decker. Along for the
roller coaster ride is pop icon Rihanna, who more than holds her own in an auspicious
acting debut as Petty Officer Cora Raikes.
However, the diva’s diehard fans might
be disappointed that she doesn’t get to sing here, unless whispering a few bars
of “Sentimental Journey” counts. Furthermore, her curvy physique is kept camouflaged
for most of the movie under unflattering military fatigues.
The
picture’s point of departure is 2005, which is when we meet Stone (Skarsgard)
and Alex Hopper (Kitsch), two brothers seemingly headed in opposite directions.
The former is serving his country as captain of the destroyer USS Sampson, while
his ne’er-do-well sibling lands in jail over an attractive blonde (Decker)
whose father (Neeson) is in charge of the entire Pacific fleet.
Fast
forward to the present where we learn that Alex has not only enlisted in the
Navy, but that he’s already risen to the rank of Lieutenant. He is also dating
Samantha over the objections of her disapproving dad who doesn’t 100% trust
that her hot-headed suitor has turned a new leaf.
Alex
is in the process of summoning up the courage to ask Admiral Shane for permission
to marry his daughter when five vessels arrive from planet G and proceed,
without provocation, to decimate an international armada on maneuvers in the middle
of the ocean. Suddenly, wedding plans have to take a back seat to defending the
planet.
Furthermore,
as the most senior officer aboard his ship to survive the initial attack, Alex
assumes command of the USS John Paul Jones. This affords the former bad boy an
opportunity to exhibit his bravery (in the tradition of Revolutionary War hero Jones’
“I have not yet begun to fight!”) as well as a much-needed chance to redeem
himself in the eyes of his future father-in-law.
The
epitome of a summer blockbuster: a dizzying display of derring-do, patriotism
and fearlessness in the face of an overwhelming alien invasion on the high
seas. And the guy even gets the girl.
Very Good
(3 stars)
Rated PG-13 for profanity and intense violence.
Running time: 131 minutes
Distributor: Universal
Pictures
1 comment:
No thanks. I think I will go with the 90% of people who thought the movie was bad
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