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The Sentinel Movie Review
The Sentinel Review

"The Sentinel" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Clark JohnsonProducer : Michael Douglas,Marcy Drogin,Arnon Milchan
Screenwiter : George Nolfi
Starring : Michael Douglas,Kiefer Sutherland,Eva Longoria,Kim Basinger,David Rasche,Martin Donovan,Ritchie Coster
The Sentinel is one of those movies made for commercials and trailers full of
shots of well-dressed Secret Service agents running and impassioned scenes
where actors bark out lines like, “He’s looking for an ally and the First Lady
is a fine one to have.” Rarely do these movies translate well into a longer
format, and The Sentinel is far from the exception.
Directed by Clark Johnson (he of the awful S.W.A.T.), The Sentinel stars
Michael Douglas and Kiefer Sutherland as former friends forced to become allies
after a plot reveals an unknown mole inside the Secret Service. Pete Garrison
(Douglas) is a veteran agent drawn deeper into the plot after his affair with
the President’s wife (Kim Basinger, playing the curviest First Lady ever) is
revealed, leading investigator David Breckinridge (Sutherland) to turn his
attentions to Garrison. Meanwhile, TV’s babe of the moment Eva Longoria
co-stars as Breckinridge’s sexy new partner and Garrison’s protégé.
You would think the Longoria character would have had mixed feelings of being
in the middle of a bitter feud. You never know. Johnson and screenwriter George
Nolfi don’t give her any thing to do, except handling the leering advances of
her co-workers. Since Douglas and Sutherland are both on autopilot — the former
is in his stoic, manly role; the latter with his Jack Bauer intensity — the
movie trudges along until Garrison goes on the lam to prove his innocence and
to save the President. That’s a 40-minute wait before the movie begins to move.
The Sentinel’s sleepy rhythm persists: The actors act important and alarmed,
conducting investigations and taking polygraph tests, and then something blows
up or someone fires a gun. The characters’ background (especially Longoria),
the motives of the mole’s terrorist sponsors, and even the relationship between
Garrison and the First Lady — all ripe with dramatic possibilities — remain
unexplored. Ditto how Garrison gets framed, which is kind of important to the
movie. For Johnson and writer George Nolfi, you don’t get brains with the
bloodshed. When they finally reveal the mole’s identity, it’s not so much a
surprise as an obligation fulfilled. You’re surprised not because of who it is,
but because after 90 minutes you have no idea who the hell he/she is.
That’s the other thing. I don’t know if I’m altogether comfortable with a movie
of so little consequence using international terrorists to threaten the
President of the United States. In shuffling these thugs into the proceedings,
Johnson and Nolfi (adapting from Gerald Petievich’s novel) make no reference to
9/11, no reference to the underlying unease many Americans feel on a daily
basis. For that to happen, The Sentinel would need a script that goes beyond a
backyard game of war, offers fully formed characters, and has an understanding
of what the nation’s reaction would be if such a plot actually occurred. But,
you know, you can’t fit all that stuff into the trailer.
High fve.
Reviewer: Pete Croatto
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