Release Date: July 01, 2008 Studio: Columbia Pictures (Sony) Director: Pete Travis Starring: Dennis Quaid, Matthew Fox, Forest Whitaker, Sigourney Weaver,
William Hurt, Edgar Ramirez, Ayelet Zurer, Eduardo Noriega, Said Taghmaoui, Zoe
Saldana Genre: Action, Thriller MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for sequences of intense violence and action, some
disturbing images and brief strong language)
Review: Vantage Point" is a good
action drama that you can predict pretty well from the trailer. It is based on a
concept that has been done many times before, that of telling the same story
from multiple points of view. Fans of "24" will get a strong sense of déjà vu.
Yet the core story is interesting. The action sequences and great camera work
make this a movie worth watching. Good acting and a strong finish help to
overcome some loose ends and production errors...more
Two-disc set extras: Commentary by director
Pete Travis, bonus digital copy of the film, deleted scene, "An Inside
Perspective" interviews with cast and crew, "Plotting an Assassination"
Interview with first-time screenwriter Barry Levy.
Movie Spotlight
Vantage Point Release Date: February 22, 2008 Studio: Columbia Pictures (Sony) Director: Pete Travis Screenwriter: Barry L. Levy Starring: Dennis Quaid, Matthew Fox, Forest Whitaker, Sigourney Weaver,
William Hurt, Edgar Ramirez, Ayelet Zurer, Eduardo Noriega, Said Taghmaoui, Zoe
Saldana Genre: Action, Thriller MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for sequences of intense violence and action, some
disturbing images and brief strong language) Official Website:
SonyPictures.com
Plot Summary: In Columbia Pictures' action-packed thriller "Vantage
Point," eight strangers with eight different points of view try to unlock the
one truth behind an assassination attempt on the president of the United States.
Thomas Barnes (Dennis Quaid) and Kent Taylor (Matthew Fox) are two Secret
Service agents assigned to protect President Ashton (William Hurt) at a landmark
summit on the global war on terror. When President Ashton is shot moments after
his arrival in Spain, chaos ensues and disparate lives collide in the hunt for
the assassin. In the crowd is Howard Lewis (Forest Whitaker), an American
tourist who thinks he’s captured the shooter on his camcorder while videotaping
the event for his kids back home. Also there, relaying the historic event to
millions of TV viewers across the globe, is American TV news producer Rex Brooks
(Sigourney Weaver). As they and others reveal their stories, the pieces of the
puzzle will fall into place – and it will become apparent that shocking
motivations lurk just beneath the surface.
Spain, circa today: there’s an international meeting
dealing with the threat of terrorism. It’s opening day held in a public
square. Enter the U.S. President’s (William Hurt) entourage and a
terrorist hijacking the day.
Who will
win against the terrorists? Vantage Point is
ultimately optimistic about it. It is more subtle than the
politically strong and pluralistic voice in Lion for
Lambs; Point is more stylish than intellectual so
is slight in argument and content. The various angles on the
same event works unevenly when the episodes aren’t all
together interesting and get progressively violent,
implausible (such as an out-of-place car chase) and profane
(the terrorists are one-dimensionally nasty). Best of the
various angles is the perspective involving Forrest
Whittaker as the tourist with the video cam who happens to
tape the assassination. Whittaker gives the striking
performance in the piece; it’s the best written character in
a weakly characterised movie.
However, it is engaging
somewhere in the middle, then loses the plot in a rush to an
unconvincing finish where things are easily sown together when the
stakes were higher.
William Hurt as the
President reminds you at first that he performed as an imprisoned gay
window dresser in Kiss of the Spiderwoman and as an emotionally
coiled husband in The Accidental Tourist … it doesn’t bode well
as the leader of the U.S. but Hurt pulls it off uniquely. Sigourney
Weaver effortlessly goes through the motions, as she can staunchly do so
well, in a small role as the tough news women. Less impressive is Dennis
Quaid as the continuing grimacing and tense bodyguard.
Vantage Point is
another of the big modern day Hollywood thrillers, like Miami Vice,
The Kingdom and Man on Fire.
No
matter how you look at it, "Vantage Point" is a tight, solid
mystery/thriller that keeps you guessing until the end Phil Villareal: Arizona Daily Star
Although "Vantage Point" never loses its momentum, you start
to feel messed with, as if crucial information is deliberately skewed to
keep you hooked. The storytellers aren't playing fair, and are
deliberately messing with you...more
An
assassination thriller that boasts the glossy tourist vistas
of an airline magazine combined with a serious case of
instant-replay-itis Jan Stuart: Newsday
Imagine if someone penciled, say, the X-Men, Elmer Fudd and
Dudley Do-Right into the Zapruder tape, then played it back
repeatedly, changing the focus each time so that you could
view the shooting of President Kennedy from each of their
perspectives...more