Showing posts with label liman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liman. Show all posts

February 14, 2008

Jumper

The first person to show any emotion loses the game.


Grade: B
Director: Doug Liman
Starring: Hayden Christensen, Jamie Bell, Rachel Bilson, Samuel L. Jackson, and Diane Lane
MPAA Rating: PG-13

Running Time: 1 hour, 28 minutes

Even the presence of Hayden Christian in the lead role does not cripple Jumper, a surprisingly satisfying actioner about a young man (Christian) who discovers the ability to instantly teleport to anywhere he has seen, either in person or in a photograph. It is a tele-comic book for the CW-generation, and while that description might speak to the film’s many deficiencies, the overall result is a visually flashy, sufficiently grounded phantasmagoria that is more entertaining than its February release-date portends.

Director Doug Liman brings with him the same welcome degree of backstory and character development seen in his previous efforts (The Bourne Identity; Go; Swingers). Moreover, he avoids the pitfall – plaguing many superhero movies – of failing to fully appreciate and embrace the extraordinary everyday enjoyed (and suffered) by fictional beings endowed with near-omnipotent power. Although the villains – a group of religious/government fanatics led by Samuel L. Jackson – are vaguely drawn, one can understand why the powers that be could not allow a subset of humans the unfettered ability to steal, trespass, and even kill. That the film’s protags turn out to be petulant, flawed, and often unlikable is not a fault of bad writing but rather an acknowledgment of God-like power in the hands of fallen mortals; it is the same subtext seen in everything from James Whale's The Invisible Man to Bruce Almighty to the Spiderman series.

The romantic subplot feels tacked-on and soapy, a sentiment furthered by the casting of ex-The O.C. cast member Rachel Bilson as the beleaguered, clueless girl-in-the-middle. On the other hand, Jamie Bell stands out as a rapscallion jumper bent more on war than coexistence. The battle is due to continue in the inevitable sequel – assuming enough people pay to see act one.

Neil Morris