Skip to main content

BOB MARLEY: ONE LOVE Featurette

Captain Phillips Review. The Film Is A Missed Opportunity

Captain Phillips Review
By: MattInRC

The overly-long Captain Phillips loses your attention and only tacitly gains it back.


The Somali pirate pressure-cooker Captain Phillips is less a story about the attempted theft of a cargo ship in 2009, instead treading into dangerous water about American values and our military supremacy. But the story of the American Richard Phillips (Tom Hanks) - who's later kidnapped by four desperate boys with machine guns - is simply too long, sacrificing effect for buildup. Phillips is the hard-working no-fuss captain whose home life is filled with worries about his children and the fact that his wife (Catherine Keener) doesn't like him taking jobs so far away. She has reason to worry, as the Somalis in 2009 were pirating ships with such frequency that US destroyers were sent out to patrol the African coast. Phillips' ship is commandeered by four Somalis, including their leader Muse (Barkhad Abdi), whose jagged teeth and frail appearance mirror that of his desperate men. But soon Phillips and his crew have them on the run, leading to Muse's capture. What should have ended as a peaceful exchange of prisoners takes a violent turn, as Phillips is kidnapped and taken aboard a lifeboat, while the Americans attempt to negotiate. As time begins to run out, Phillips must maintain his sanity while dealing with the prospects of his own mortality.


Director Paul Greengrass (The Bourne Ultimatum) wields gritty and grainy here like most directors these days, inspiring his actors into a pressure cooker of a third act aboard the lifeboat. But it's his longtime editor Christopher Rouse who leaves too much in here, from the early dichotomy between Hanks and the pirate's 'homelife' to procedures aboard the boat before the attacks. There's just too much fluff here, almost as if Greengrass and Rouse wanted desperately to respect the incredible trauma Phillips actually went through. And it's not like we're talking about a few over-run scenes here: this film needed a buzz cut rather than a trim, suffering through minutes of needless dialogue including a snail-paced second act. By the time the good (not great) third act arrives, we've caught our friends napping several times as Hanks and crew go through monotonous duties not needed to further the story. Even the third act has enough bloat to make a dietitian nervous, as Pacific Rim's Max Martini arrives with his Navy Seals ready to do business but stuck in negotiations.


Of course, it's Hanks who creates another mesmerizing performance, generating such empathy for our unlikely hero that we can't help but love him for keeping this meandering production on track. From his parental counseling of a young pirate, to his visceral reaction to the strike by Navy Seals, Hanks is us, imbuing all that is decent and honorable in people. That's a powerful draw, but not enough to keep us from drifting too often. Captain Phillips just doesn't know when too much is too much. Greengrass spends way too much time setting up our characters, before plunging them into tension that takes too long to resolve. It's not that films over 2 hours aren't effective anymore (see The Great Gatsby and the gripping Prisoners), but Phillips is an excellent candidate for a UCLA Film Editing class.

I admit that I had to leave the screening for the bathroom during the third act, something I try desperately not to make a habit. Upon my return, I asked my friend what I had missed. She replied simply, 'nothing' which tells you just how bloated this film is. Had it been reduced 30 minutes, Phillips could have been a guaranteed Oscar contender. For now, it's just a missed opportunity. Captain Phillips is rated PG-13 and has a runtime of 134 minutes.

Discuss this review with fellow SJF fans on Facebook. On Twitter, follow us at @SandwichJohnFilms, and follow author Matt Cummings at @mfc90125.

Please Leave A Comment-

Comments

Highly, highly recommended for anyone who enjoys a taut thriller that will keep your attention gripped to the screen for its entire 134 minutes.

Rowena
Carpet Repair Columbus

Popular posts from this blog

Sex Tape Review: Overly Sexual, Rude, Vulgar, and Absolutely Hilarious

The raunchy Sex Tape will divide audiences and critics, but who cares? Sex Tape suggests a growing practice among loving partners: that of making a raunchy testament of their escapades for posterity. But what happens when that evidence gets seen by friends, neighbors, and even the mailman? This is the plot that pits Jay (Jason Segel) and Annie (Cameron Diaz) in an effort to secure every iPad gift Jay has given, his record company playlists being the envy of the recipients, but which has also inadvertently spread the video to every device. The reason for the act - termed in the movie as pulling "the full Lincoln " for its three-hour length - stems from the couple's non-existent social life, brought on by the constant demands of their children. The couple has a lot to lose: a burgeoning business relationship between Annie and Hank (Rob Lowe) could end if the iPad she's given to Hank exposes the video, and so the couple sets out to reclaim and wipe the incrim...

Movie Review: #Vacation

Vacation makes me want to take a STAY-cation. Review by Matt Cummings It's not too often that a movie makes me wish film never existed, yet her I am ready to give the newest Vacation all the hate it deserves. And hate on it I will. Grown-up Rusty (Ed Helms) is stuck in a dull marriage to Debbie (Christina Applegate), who's been forced year after year to spend vacation with her family at a cabin in Michigan. When the overly optimistic Rusty realizes his family needs a change, he packs them up for a trip to Walley World, the site of his greatest trip as a teen. But soon, his family begins to encounter difficulties and flat-out disasters that could end their road trip and return Rusty's marriage back to square one. It might surprise our readers to know that someone from our team actually considered walking out of Vacation , and we get to see these films for free. That's how bad our experience became as we sat mesmerized by its 99 minutes of ineptit...

HOUSE OF GUCCI Featurette & Tickets Now on Sale

House of Gucci is inspired by the shocking true story of the family behind the Italian fashion empire. When Patrizia Reggiani ( Lady Gaga ), an outsider from humble beginnings, marries into the Gucci family, her unbridled ambition begins to unravel the family legacy and triggers a reckless spiral of betrayal, decadence, revenge, and ultimately…murder.     Discuss this with fellow SJF fans on Facebook . On Twitter, follow us at @SandwichJohnFilms Please Leave A Comment-