World War II. The crew – including Matthew McConaughey in his “young star”
phase, Harvey Keitel in his “Harvey Keitel” phase, and Jon Bon Jovi in his
perpetual “can’t act” phase - of the submarine of Lt. Cmdr. Mike Dahlgren (Bill
Paxton) is sent on a top secret surprise mission to use a lucky opportunity to
grab an Enigma Machine from a German U-Boot.
Things do of course become more complicated than that, and soon the US
submarine is destroyed and most of its crew killed, with only a handful of men
under the command of XO McConaughey alive on a German U-Boot that has seen
better days. More tense complications do of course ensue during the attempt to
get the Enigma Machine in allied hands.
This is the other diamond in the otherwise naff crown of director Jonathan
Mostow, standing at eye level to his pretty damn great Breakdown. In
fact, his two good films are so good, I can’t help but think the director must
have been exceedingly unlucky with outside forces on his other projects, for the
kind of talent for suspense and tense action his two excellent films demonstrate
can’t have been a fluke. Obviously, the script Mostow’s working from is of
dubious historical authenticity (if you want to know about the actual way Enigma
was cracked, Wikipedia and a bunch of sources mentioning many people from exotic
countries like Poland, France, and the UK this film has never heard about apart
from a tiny mention once the plot is over beckon), and its characters are cut
from very typical genre movie cloth.
However, the script does know how to make its shorthand characters just
lively enough for an audience to care about their fate, and provides the damn
great cast many a good opportunity to sweat and stare dramatically without the
plot ever getting bogged down in melodramatics. Instead, things always feel
tight, tense and teetering on the edge of catastrophe, Mostow using all tricks
of the thriller-style war movie to do a very classic thing: dragging his
audience to the edge of their seats. It does help here that the film, despite
its historical inauthenticity, is the kind of war adventure that very well knows
that war isn’t actually an adventure, so this isn’t only showing heroic
pursuits, but men following these pursuits while in desperate fear for their
lives, everybody quickly coming to the edge of their respective breaking points.
Which, obviously, enhances the tension Mostow creates through masterful staging
and editing of the suspense quite a bit.
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
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