This action picture from 2001 is a marvel of odd choices. Owen Wilson (Anaconda, Cars 3) as a downed Navy fighter pilot in enemy territory who must run the gauntlet of war-torn Bosnia to escape to a friendly country next door is miscast. His laid back jokey demeanor doesn’t fit with the character. Most of the runtime calls for him to be in awe, pain, anger, display stoicism, remain defiant, etc. but he never really gets there. He’s too much of a lightweight compared to the more intense tone of every other aspect the production is aiming for.
The editing I can’t go too hard on considering the style
of the time but the chaotic moments are damn annoying. Every once in a while it goes into a frantic
seizure with rapid cuts, zooms, camera spinning, slow motion, sped up motion
and other gimmickry. Be careful, suffering
whiplash is a real threat here.
Moving on, the soundtrack is all over the goddamn place
with pop songs seemingly chosen at random like “What’d I Say” by Ray Charles used
during a scene where Wilson and co. fool around propelling a football off the deck
of an aircraft carrier at incredible velocity.
But then there’s also techno bangers, villain cues reminiscent of Brad
Fiedel’s T2 with metal clanging, dramatic choir singing and your typical
driving orchestral pounding. Again, the
tones don’t line up.
But what about all that sweet action? Well, it’s both cool at times (Wilson’s jet
being chased by two heat seeking missiles is tense as hell, followable, fast
paced and damn exciting, although the scene is twice as long as it needs to be)
and comical at times (Wilson must run through a crumbling factory lined with
trip wires all setup adjacent to each other like fifty or sixty in a row like a
Wile E. Coyote cartoon and who the hell stacked this shit like this? No strategy or thought was put into placing
them).
Strangely everything is mismatched so much that it comes back around to being kinda interesting. It nearly works as a whole even though any individual element is a head scratcher. Every actor is taking the material deadly seriously and then Owen Wilson pops in to do a whiny “aw c’mon”. Some of the shots are neat like the POV of the catapult that launches the jets off the aircraft carrier or the extreme slow motion of a baddie getting blown away by a trip mine. But then other parts are a cheese-fest like Wilson’s constant headbutting with his superior officer (Gene Hackman (Extreme Measures, Young Frankenstein)) or his saccharine relationship with his smiling and always supportive co-pilot (Gabriel Macht (The Spirit, Whiteout)) who’s way too upbeat so you know damn well he won’t last long.
This was director John Moore’s first feature and he went
on to not have the best track record which includes the pointless 2006 The
Omen remake and the sad sequel A Good Day to Die Hard. I can see how this film would spark interest
though. There’s enough good, even great,
stuff to give him more projects. Maybe
he would abandon some of the sillier of-the-times techniques and mature with
subsequent films but the material didn’t really pan out. He doesn’t seem to have been active since
2016.
So there’s plenty to enjoy and plenty to mock here. From Hackman’s gruff performance to the title
being the plot. The entire thing is
basically just Owen Wilson going to a place, getting shot at, navigating a set
of obstacles particular to that location, running away (there’s A LOT of
running in this) and evading death for a short period until the next set
piece. Repeat ad nauseum. Each circumstance is entertaining and pretty
wild but almost immediately becomes laughable due to Wilson’s bottomless dumb
luck and the ineptitude of his pursuers.
He should’ve easily died twenty times over.
Take that for what you will. It’s messy absurd fun and a time capsule of early 2000’s junk when major movie studios still made straight ahead genre action shit like this. The same concept would be done much better decades later, albeit in only one act, in Top Gun: Maverick.
*Spoiler for this final paragraph* Lastly I have to
mention the weird decision made by Owen Wilson at the end of the movie to stay
in the Navy after putting in his letter of resignation earlier in the
film. You would think the insane
situation he barely survived where he had a thousand brushes with death would
make him want to exit the Navy even more.
But nope, instead his resolve is strengthened.