This is a B tier film for Black and director Renny Harlin
though. The major problem is the story
is hard to follow and seems unnecessarily confusing. It’s a total rip off of “The Bourne Identity”
(the books, the Matt Damon movies hadn’t come out yet) involving a woman with
amnesia discovering she used to be a government assassin. When an old foe attempts to murder her she
goes on a journey with a private investigator to dig up answers.
Geena Davis (The Fly) stars as Samantha Caine/Charly
Baltimore (good name) and she does an alright job. She has to play two vastly different
characters, one a jolly corny school teacher and the other a take no shit stone
cold killer, and mostly pulls it off. What’s
important is this was a high profile Hollywood action movie starring a woman
which was practically nonexistent at the time.
And Davis is a solid actress who can tussle with the big boys when it
comes to executing the tougher moments and be heartfelt with the tender ones.
Sam Jackson (Die Hard with a Vengeance) steals the
show though as Mitch Henessey (another good name). He has a rough past involving a stretch in
prison and a lifetime of questionable choices.
But at his core he’s a decent man who’s trying to be a stand up father
to his son and he genuinely wants to help this woman figure out who she really
is. At the same time he’s game for
taking on the bad guys despite it being an extremely dangerous mission. Jackson slips into this role so naturally
with all his badass swagger it’s a lot of fun to watch.
I mean the movie’s kinda fun but it’s definitely missing
coherence. And while Black has good
ideas, some of the most humorous dialogue he’s ever written and a cool as shit
title there’s too much fat that should’ve been trimmed away. For example Henessey becomes a superfluous
character halfway through once Charly Baltimore’s assassin personality takes back
over. She remembers everything and is a
warrior who can take care of herself.
She doesn’t need Henessey anymore and the movie acknowledges this by literally
kicking him to the curb. But she changes
her mind and lets him tag along for the hell of it.
Oddly there’s also too little explanation. It’s pretty frustrating to not have a grasp
on where the characters are going and why they’re doing what they’re doing in
any given scene. I don’t know why this
road trip with Caine and Henessey begins in the first place. The destination is unknown until they’re
already driving.
So there’s no rush to get to this guy. However, if you’re looking for a Christmas action
picture to add to your rotation for the holidays this’ll fit the bill. Otherwise everyone involved has made better
stuff. The big blockbuster Harlin and
Davis did right before this, Cutthroat Island, is a much better picture
in my opinion.
Anyway, Merry Christmas and happy holidays. See you next year!
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