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Sunday
September 17 2006
Heroes
By
John Petrakis
When it was announced
that Oliver Stone would be directing a film
about the downing of the twin towers on 9/11,
there was a collective gasp. Would Stone focus
on one of the many conspiracy theories about the
disaster, as he did in JFK? Would he
transform the story into a mythical tale of good
versus evil, as in Platoon? Would he pull
out all the stops and dwell on the death,
destruction and violence, ā la Natural Born
Killers?
To everyone's surprise, and many critics'
relief, Stone, working with a script by former
actress and first-time screenwriter Andrea
Berloff, has made a film that is not the least
bit controversial.
It is also not the least bit interesting. It is
a stolid, big-budget Movie of the Week that
looks and feels as if it was constructed from an
LCD (least-common-denominator) screenwriting
textbook.
World Trade Center is a celebration of heroism
and camaraderie, focusing on two members of New
York's Port Authority Police Department.
Sergeant John McLoughlin (Nicolas Cage) and
Officer Will Jimeno (Michael Peņa) were
seriously injured in the collapse of the towers
and waited 12 hours to be rescued by men who
were every bit as brave and selfless as the two
police officers, since they were risking their
own lives too in the effort.
As an inspirational tale of how much good was
displayed on a day that will always be
remembered for so much evil, World Trade
Center has its heart in the right place. It
tries to do for 9/11 what Frank Capra did for
the Great Depression and William Wyler did for
World War II. The difference is that when Capra
and Wyler rallied the nation during times of
trauma, they didn't abandon their directing
skills.
Not once did I find myself in awe of a shot, a
camera angle, a lighting position or even pieces
of the soundtrack. If I didn't know entering the
theater that the film was by Stone, I would have
guessed it was the work of an eager youngster.
One of the admirable aspects of Stone has been
his willingness to fail on his own terms. Not
here.
He isn't helped much by Berloff's script.
(Stone, who began his film career as a writer,
usually produces his own screenplays.) The
character introductions are strictly by the
book, the exposition is clumsy and obvious, and
the dialogue among the police officers to set
the tone is like the foxhole dialogue that was a
regular feature of the old war movies in which
every ethnic group was represented.
This predictability extends to the portrayal of
the families waiting for news of loved ones. The
scenes with Donna McLoughlin (Maria Bello) in
New York and Allison Jimeno (Maggie Gyllenhaal)
in New Jersey are so familiar they could have
been outtakes from Apollo 13.
I like the way Stone avoided shots of the planes
hitting the towers, showing instead shadows
against the walls of buildings, quick flashes of
television sets and a plethora of horrified
reaction shots.
At a few moments it begins to look like Stone
will strut his stuff, especially when he deals
with the story of Dave Karnes (Michael Shannon),
an ex-marine from Connecticut who plays a key
part in the search for the two police officers.
Karnes's role seems to be Stone's pathway into
the story, but Karnes gets lost in a jumble of
backlighting and off-screen shouting.
The acting is tepid at best. Cage's one-note
expression looks painted on. Peņa (who was so
strong as the locksmith in last year's Crash)
fares the best, underplaying while those around
him go over the top.
The word around Hollywood is that the financial
failure of Alexander prompted Stone to be
cautious. He wanted to make a film that would be
in line for Oscar nominations and guarantee big
DVD sales. That may all come to pass. But what
does a director profit if he gains major
domestic and overseas grosses and loses his own
soul?
John
Petrakis teaches screenwriting in Chicago
Copyright
2006 CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Reproduced by permission
from the September 05 2006 issue of the CHRISTIAN
CENTURY. Subscriptions: from $49/year from P.O.
Box 378, Mt. Morris, IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097.
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Christian Century website.
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