Jumper Movie Review
Jumper Review
"Jumper" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Doug LimanProducer : Vince Gerardis,Ralph Vicinanza,Marc S. Fischer
Screenwiter : David S. Goyer,Jim Uhls,Simon Kinberg
Starring : Hayden Christensen,Samuel L. Jackson,Jamie Bell,Diane Lane,Max Thieriot,AnnaSophia Robb,Rachel Bilson
Some kids break out in face-scarring acne. Most everyone's voice drops an octave
or two. Yet right around the time David Rice (Max Thieriot) hit puberty, he discovered
he could teleport. His first leap took him from a frozen lake to the local library
so he could dodge a dangerous bully. He calls on the power to help him escape his
abusive father (Michael Rooker, who you hire when Robert Patrick is unavailable).
In time, the 15-year-old "bouncer" concocts schemes to rob banks, funding a lucrative
lifestyle that starts drawing attention from unfavorable forces.
Hayden Christensen steps into the David Rice role as Jumper progresses and delivers
a performance that's as bland and flavorless as his moniker suggests. Years after
leaving home, David has mastered the art of jumping and uses it to have lunch atop
the Great Sphinx, surf tubular waves off the coast of Fiji, flirt with chicks in a London
pub, and take his high-school sweetheart, Millie (Rachel Bilson), around Rome's top
tourist traps.
It's during that Italian jaunt when David encounters Griffin (Jamie Bell), a fellow
teleporter who informs our hero of his new function in the age-old battle raging
between special beings with "transportational" abilities. The jumpers are hunted
by paladins, who appear to be led by Roland (Samuel L. Jackson), an ambiguous agent working
for an unknown task force who believes only God deserves the ability to be anywhere
at once. While Roland can't "jump," he does cover a lot of ground -- he discovers
David in Manhattan, follows Millie to Italy, and then intercepts the couple in Detroit
(which is where you jump when you run out of money to shoot in Chicago). He also
piggybacks on Griffin's traveling wormhole for a climactic battle in the middle of
an Egyptian desert.
A jumper's natural ability might be necessary to leapfrog the gaping plot holes in
the Jumper script. Roland informs David that it's hard to teleport when electricity
is being pumped through a jumper's brain, but doesn't elaborate why. And to where
could a jumper actually jump? Can they merely look at a picture of a location and
leap there (as suggested), or do they have to physically visit a spot before teleporting
to it? David mentions something about "jumping spots" he has created around Tokyo,
but the science behind the teleportation is never made clear.
Instead of delving into the clashing histories of jumpers and paladins, Jumper di
rector Doug Liman develops the inane romance between David and Millie -- two empty
vessels who make the Cloverfield kids look like Rhodes scholars. Christensen's stiff
portrayal of Anakin Skywalker in George Lucas' Star Wars prequels earned him the fitting
nickname "Mannequin" Skywalker. He shows no improvement as an actor, delivering lines
in a monosyllabic pattern that's backed by a vacant stare. Bell and Bilson adequately
overlook the overall nonsense of the story, while Jackson mails in his villainous
part.
Liman musters plausible effects but directs without urgency. The action moves along
to John Powell's jaunty, jazzy score, which counteracts Christensen's lifeless narration.
At least Liman avoids easy green-screen technology to actually film his globetrotting scenes
in world cities such as Paris, Rome, New York City, and Ann Arbor, Michigan. It lends
a sliver of credibility to the production and tallies frequent flier miles for the
director and his crew. At each stop, however, I wanted to send postcards to our old
friend Mr. Logic that simply stated, "Wish you were here!"
Big wires make ya wanna... jump, jump.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





