BOTTOM
LINE: “Knight
And Day” has an intriguing take on an old formula and a solid
start, but unfortunately turns in to stupidity and silliness by
the climax, and its star leads share virtually no chemistry whatsoever.
THE
GOOD:
The best way to describe this film is to say it is a James Bond
film told from the point of view of the Bond girl. In this way,
“Knight and Day” starts off in a good place. Through
a seemingly chance meeting at an airport, June Havens (Cameron Diaz)
is pulled in to a deadly chase for secret agent Roy Miller (Tom
Cruise) when the two of them are put together on the same flight.
As June realises that Roy is a force to be reckoned with, the pair
bicker and fight their way through a haze of gun fire and tricky
situations, with June unable to figure out who the bad guy really
is. The first thirty minutes of the film are perhaps the best, with
Tom Cruise actually portraying the double-sided nature of his character
quite well, and Cameron Diaz doing her usual ditzy blonde routine.
Many of the action sequences are well realised, particularly the
motorcycle chase in Spain. “Knight and Day” has been
created as a piece of fun popcorn entertainment, with two likeable
leads and the usual mayhem.
THE
BAD:
Although starting in a good place, “Knight and Day”
quickly degenerates in to stupidity and silliness, with a good dose
of bad computer generated special effects thrown in. There is not
one particular moment that sets it off, but rather a steady downhill
slide, starting with a poorly realised flight crash scene, to a
running of the bulls scene (with computer bulls), to the completely
out of place touch of June becoming Roy’s saviour and getting
him out of harm’s way at the end of the film. How such a professional
secret agent in Miller could allow a clutzy woman like June follow
him without being noticed in a crucial stage in the film, or how
June could have the knowledge of getting Miller out of hospital
and escaping the clutches of the intelligence agencies is beyond
belief to the point of being laughable, despite being a punctuation
mark for the way their relationship started. All of this may have
been okay if Cruise and Diaz actually had any chemistry together
but they do not. “Knight and Day” is ultimately stupid;
yet another Hollywood film that takes a decent idea, or a riff on
a decent idea, and turns it in to mass-produced popcorn to appeal
to those with short attention spans.