BOTTOM
LINE:
“Poseidon”
is a woefully bad movie from start to finish; the only entertainment
one can find here is a good laugh as the plot moves from one ridiculous
moment to the clichéd next.
THE GOOD:
Trying to find something good to say about a film like
this is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. However, to
be fair, director Wolfgang Petersen has assembled a solid cast,
led by the always dependable Kurt Russell and Josh Lucas, the latter
giving the most interesting performance in the film as the ruthless
career gambler who finds a heart as he changes from only saving
himself to helping to save the others that follow him out of the
disaster. Richard Dreyfuss always does well with what he is given,
despite been given a two-dimensional clichéd role that in
someone else’s hands would have been completely laughable.
It’s hard to see why this assembled cast would want to do
a film with such a bad script but they are the only ones who make
the film watchable. That said, they must have been cringing during
certain scenes, particularly Dreyfuss and his introductory scene.
The only other good thing I have to say about the film is its dramatic
opening shot of the Poseidon ship; it lasts the length of the film’s
opening credits and seamlessly combines fantastic computer generated
images with live action shot on the boat set.
THE BAD:
It is amazing that a film with a budget
of $160 million did not devote any of those financial resources
to the script. One would think that was the foundation of any film,
and the makers of the original 1972 “The Poseiden Adventure”
were able to do this without an issue and for much less money in
churning out what is considered a classic disaster film. The characters
are shallow and predictable (with the exception of Josh Lucas’
Dylan Johns character). There is no story, only silly moments stringing
together the supposed tense action as the characters try to escape
the capsized luxury liner. Take for example the actual capsizing;
the captain sees a CG wave approaching the ship and exclaims a very
corny, “No…” before the wave in all its CG glory
cracks in to the ship, leading to much destruction and passenger
deaths which are needlessly graphic (people getting impaled, burnt
in fireballs, having lifts fall on top of the them, and that’s
all before the water gets in to the ship). When everything calms
down, one of the other crew announces to everyone they were hit
by a “rogue wave”; whether or not this is scientifically
accurate I’m not sure, but it was the first of many moments
that made me burst out in laughter due to its dreadfully stupid
delivery. The film then shifts in to disaster mode with a group
of individuals led by Lucas and Russell trying to make it out to
safety, riddled with all the typical devices such as the ‘close-to-drowning’
escapes, a couple of ‘tragic’ death scenes and the exclamation
of love between two young hopefuls. In the end when a decision has
to be made, the boyfriend of Russell’s daughter insists on
engaging the deadly task as he is the best qualified. However, with
precious seconds being wasted, he wants his girlfriend to tell him
she loves him before he goes. In the mean time, Russell goes and
does the deed himself which leads to his supposedly tragic demise.
Maybe in the hands of a director who wanted to make all this work
all of these clichés and disaster devices would have worked
but for some reason none of the direction in this film will do anything
except make you laugh at what you are watching. Wolfgang Petersen
came in to this film with some directing credibility and he has
effectively torpedoed his career with this film; he would have to
direct one hell of a film before he could get rid of the tag: “the
director of Poseidon”.