Sahara Movie Review
Sahara Review

"Sahara" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Breck EisnerProducer : Howard Baldwin,Karen Baldwin,Mace Neufeld,Stephanie Austin,Philip Anschutz
Screenwiter : Thomas Dean Donnelly,Joshua Oppenheimer,John C. Richards,James V. Hart
Starring Matthew Mcconaughey, Penlope Cruz, Steve Zahn, William H Macy, Delroy Lindo
Nearly 25 years ago, Paramount Pictures struck gold with a film about an
archeologist-adventure seeker named Indiana Jones. His quest to unravel
mysteries and conquer evil around the world remains one of the most thrilling
stories of its kind. Based on the trailer, Sahara, with its treasure-hunting
hero Dirk Pitt, would appear to embody many of its predecessor's markings. Yet,
what's lurking behind all of Sahara's explosions, one-liners, and plotting
enemies is a monotonous, unsatisfying trek through an endless desert that would
even have Dr. Jones scrambling for a new crusade.
Matthew McConaughey plays Dirk, the carefree leader of an exploration team
working to recover lost artifacts from the ocean floor off the coast of Western
Africa. Dirk is infatuated with the story of a captain from an ironclad
American Civil War battleship who owned the last known U.S. gold dollar. As
luck would have it, this ship just so happened to journey from Virginia to the
nearby nation of Mali after the war. With the permission of his boss Admiral
James Sandecker (William H. Macy), Dirk and his team, including his wiseass
sidekick Al Giordino (Steve Zahn), are given three days to search the Niger
River for the ship and the lost gold coin.
Dirk's treasure hunt incidentally coincides with the work of Eva Rojas
(Penélope Cruz) and her team of World Health Organization doctors investigating
an apparent plague that is devouring the area's population. While Dirk, Al, and
Eva are on separate journeys, they frequently (and conveniently) cross each
other's paths -- apparently the Sahara is much smaller than we were told in
grade school. Anyhow, the trio soon discovers that the local warlord, General
Kazim, is conspiring with a rich French industrialist named Massarde to
purposely poison tribes and villages.
Kazim and Massarde want the meddling westerners out of Africa and they have
dispatched the Mali army to capture them. At this point, Sahara does a complete
about-face; the treasure hunters become the hunted crusaders. And it's at that
moment when Sahara loses us. The story that follows is founded on a
preposterous plot that allows Dirk, Al, and Eva to travel across the desert and
back with unbelievable ease. The overmatched trio hardly breaks a sweat, or a
nail, as they fight Mali's malicious army or prevent bombs from detonating
inside a power plant. They're even able to quickly decipher ancient African
tribal drawings that Indiana Jones would have needed a lifetime to solve.
A team of four screenwriters adapted this mess from the widely popular and
thrilling novel by Clive Cussler. Dissatisfied with the liberal approach taken
with his material, Cussler has protested the film's release and has pending
litigation against the filmmakers. The film version skips significant details
and interesting subplots are glossed-over. It's no wonder the highly mechanized
finished product feels so unfulfilling -- many of the best parts of the book
are left out of the movie!
McConaughey certainly has the brawn to make him a believable adventure-seeker,
but he's given so little personality that it's difficult for us to admire his
heroics. As you might expect, Cruz is smoking hot. Unfortunately, this lends
little credibility to her role as a doctor in a third-world country. And while
Zahn's relentless commentary track provides nearly all of the film's comic
relief, his irrelevant humor is far from memorable; mostly, it's just annoying.
But even better than I could summate, Zahn's comment late in the film provides
the best critique of Sahara: "There's no way that should have worked." Exactly!
The DVD adds commentary tracks, deleted scenes, and three making-of featurettes.
What, I'm gonna have to read something?
Reviewer: David Levine





