The premise of showing the same attempted presidential assassination from five perspectives is a novel one ripe with potential but also with storytelling dangers; on the whole, this movie avoided the pratfalls and mined the good stuff. Of course not all the segments are equally engaging, so the flow is a bit uneven, but a nice job is done of carrying the throughpoint with great suspense (they cut away to the next character at the most frustrating time, which means they did their job). The hitch of not giving any character enough screentime for us to bond with them is dodged by nicely overlapping the stories and having a strong cast, highlighted by Forest Whitaker's nice guy tourist and Dennis Quaid's shellshocked but kickass Secret Service agent (Matthew Fox is way outside of his limited comfort range, but it's not a deal-breaker). It's not perfect, there are some predictable bits and a lot of coincidences, but for the most part, it's intense and intricate and then capped off with a fantastic car chase.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(70)
-
▼
November
(22)
- Paragraph Movie Reviews: In-Flight Triple Feature
- Gone to Vegas!
- Sell American Gladiators to Me and Rickey
- Paragraph Movie Reviews: Vantage Point
- Pimping My Stuff: Marvel Digital Holiday Special
- Flash-back
- AIM Adventures: The Doctors
- Rock on, Dargo Ktor!
- Essentials Extra: New Teen Titans Must Reads
- Paragraph Movie Reviews: Wristcutters
- Earth's Mightiest Sketch Blog Extra: GREEN Hulk
- Earth's Mightiest Sketch Blog: The Hulk
- The Essentials: New Teen Titans v1 #1-40/Tales of ...
- Watchfriends
- Paragraph Movie Reviews: Role Models
- A few words on the guy who won last night (and the...
- Earth's Mightiest Sketch Blog: Ant-Man
- Ben's Indy Odyssey: Super Spy
- A Costume Update
- Wizard Features that Never Were: Best of the Best
- Trading Card Depot: 21 Jump Street
- Paragraph Movie Reviews Double Feature
-
▼
November
(22)
Paragraph Movie Reviews: Vantage Point
The premise of showing the same attempted presidential assassination from five perspectives is a novel one ripe with potential but also with storytelling dangers; on the whole, this movie avoided the pratfalls and mined the good stuff. Of course not all the segments are equally engaging, so the flow is a bit uneven, but a nice job is done of carrying the throughpoint with great suspense (they cut away to the next character at the most frustrating time, which means they did their job). The hitch of not giving any character enough screentime for us to bond with them is dodged by nicely overlapping the stories and having a strong cast, highlighted by Forest Whitaker's nice guy tourist and Dennis Quaid's shellshocked but kickass Secret Service agent (Matthew Fox is way outside of his limited comfort range, but it's not a deal-breaker). It's not perfect, there are some predictable bits and a lot of coincidences, but for the most part, it's intense and intricate and then capped off with a fantastic car chase.