The Core
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 28 March 2003
It's
about responsibility
It's
hard to imagine a movie with worse timing than The Core. For
one thing, it's a motley-crew-saving-the-world movie, with exploding
buildings imagery that probably seems less fun now than it might
have a few months ago. Here the explosions emerge from inside the
world itself. The earth's core has stopped rotating, which means 1)
the protective electromagnetic field will fail, and 2)
"everybody on earth will be dead within a year." Jeepers.
As
if this cosmic meltdown scenario isn't bad enough, the introduction
of a crucial character -- astronaut/pilot Major Rebecca
("Beck") Childs (Hilary Swank) -- depends on a space
shuttle disaster. This is designed to demonstrate her most excellent
skills and instincts, as she actually comes up with the perfecto
coordinates to save the ship from disaster, allowing it to land --
after much flaming and careening -- safely in downtown Los Angeles.
This is quite the fancy stunt, and no doubt, when the film was
conceived (screenplay by Cooper Layne and John Rogers), it seemed
neat.
Now,
however, the sequence includes some alarmingly resonant images --
the ship's exterior in flames while streaking through the blue sky;
urgent glance exchanged among crew members; and a sudden loss of
radar contact with NASA, whereupon a ground controller named Stick (Alfre
Woodard) looks properly horrified. It's not a little creepy, and,
depending on how you look at it, a wholly bold or wholly insensitive
gambit. (The film's promotional staff, at least, took note, and
pulled the trailer featuring the shuttle trouble.)
Once
this bumpy patch is over, however, The Core settles quickly
into the most mundane of plot and character developments. A series
of mini-crises around the world indicates the calamity looming
before oblivious earthlings: pigeons lose their bearings in
Trafalgar Square, plummeting into windows, people, and fountains;
the Roman Coliseum fries in an zap-zap electrical storm; the Golden
Gate Bridge is cut in half by a super-searing-hot sunbeam (or
something) that gets in through a sliver of a hole in the ozone
layer.
Each
of these scenes is both hilariously overstated and dreadfully
rendered, evoking the good old days of '70s Disaster Pix. To be
fair, such corniness does give The Core something of a Grade
C drive-in movie look, as diverse no-names throw themselves
dutifully into cinematic panics. Repeated shots of screaming faces,
hurtling bodies, and frantic limb-waving, from low and deliriously
canted angles, remind that poor schlubs respond badly to the
unexpected. At the same time, the crises ostensibly generating such
hysteria appear as listless CGI effects, with sets looking, on
occasion, like they've been scavenged from Godzilla, King of All
Monsters! (It's perhaps worth noting here that the film,
originally slated for a 1 November 2002 release, was pushed back
five months so the effects crew could add "more scenes of
destruction," with emphasis apparently on "more," not
better.)
Such
imminent catastrophe plainly calls for drastic action, namely, the
assembly of an intrepid, occasionally internally contentious team to
burrow into the earth and jumpstart core rotation. While this
storyline may be creaky (Disney made a movie of Jules Verne's
Journey to the Center of the Earth back in 1959), the 21st
century team is fashionably multi-culti, while also predictably
typed.
Reluctant
Hero is Josh Keyes (Aaron Eckhart), physics professor
extraordinaire. He happens upon the problem by accident one day,
does some quick calculations, assisted by some even quicker research
by his devoted RAs, and comes up with the doomsday scenario. Eckhart
(best known as Julia Roberts' generous biker beau in Erin
Brockovich, best respected for his admirably raw work with Neil
LaBute) manages to look cheery and virile at the same time, which
goes some way toward smoothing over Josh's not-quite-explained
behavior shifts.
The
primary thorn in Josh's side is his should-be partner, celebrity
geophysicist and Carl Sagan wannabe Conrad Zimsky (Stanley Tucci,
who so needs to stop playing the clueless snoot).
Self-involved and prissy, Zimsky annoys everyone, especially former
colleague Edward Brazzleton (Delroy Lindo), from whom he stole
precious, name-making research twenty years ago. A prototypical
angry black man ever since, Braz has been living out in the desert,
designing a terra-burrowing ship, and is more than happy to complete
the project with the government's check for $50 billion (this
bestowed by a general played by reliably solemn Richard Jenkins).
Tagging
along, that is, mostly observing the grumping by these three, are
gallant pilots Beck and Robert Iverson (Bruce Greenwood), and
weapons specialist Sergei Leveque (Tchéky Karyo). He's in charge of
the nuclear bombs that will, presumably, restart the core. (At last!
Weapons of mass destruction will be put to "constructive"
use.) He's also French, underlining yet again The Core's poor
timing -- how quaint (or maybe nostalgic) this notion of a committed
U.S. and French collabo seems today.
The
project is put together in a matter of months, reduced to a few yay-team
montage minutes on screen, in order to get all the primaries
underground as soon as possible. All, that is, except the stalwart
Stick and a hacker named Rat (DJ Qualls), conscripted to ensure that
news of what's going on doesn't hit the internet (i.e., he's
supposed to "hack the planet"). Rat's a nerdy smart-ass
whose dismissal by Zimsky immediately marks him as admirable; that
Josh likes him also speaks in his favor, as does his minimal demand
for payment: a supply of Xena tapes and Hot Pockets. Sadly,
the film omits cutaways to Xena, which surely would have
lifted all spirits.
Once
underground, egos vie, tempers flare, and a bit of romance simmers
between virile boy and the only the girl in the room. Lasers mounted
on the ship's nose carve out a tunnel as the enabled by some sort of
laser beams that carve a tunnel for the ship as it goes. The ship
itself is composed of a material that inventor Braz cleverly calls
Unobtainium, which supposedly grows stronger with heat. Following a
series of difficulties and deaths (some accidental, some painfully
noble), the ship reaches its destination, as it must, and team
members learn important lessons, like, say, "Leadership isn't
about ability; it's about responsibility." Roger that. You
might say the same for moviemaking: just because you can imagine a
plot and a set of effects doesn't mean you have to impose it on the
rest of us.
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Directed
by:
Jon Amiel
Starring:
Aaron Eckhart
Hilary Swank
Delroy Lindo
Stanley Tucci
DJ Qualls
Tchéky Karyo
Bruce Greenwood
Alfre Woodard
Richard Jenkins
Written
by:
Cooper Layne
John Rogers
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate for
children under 13.
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