Vantage Point Movie Review
Vantage Point Review
"Vantage Point" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Pete TravisProducer : Tania Landau,Ricardo Del Río
Screenwiter : Barry Levy
Starring : Dennis Quaid,Matthew Fox,Forest Whitaker,Sigourney Weaver,William Hurt
When you hear that a film has been sitting on the shelf for a couple of years (since
2006, apparently), certain reactionary red flags go off in your head. Of course,
the makers of the new political thriller, Vantage Point, could argue that it was the subject
matter, not sloppy filmmaking or underdeveloped characters, that required some temporal
displacement. After all, the narrative revolves around the attempted assassination
of the U.S. President at an anti-terrorism summit in Spain. The argued novelty of writer
Barry Levy's script and director Pete Travis' approach is the Rashomon-styled multiple
perspective of the participants. We view this event from every possible point of
view except a logical -- or entertaining -- one.
During a high powered public meeting between the United States and several Arab nations,
President Ashton (William Hurt) is seemingly felled by an assassin's bullet. Seconds
later, a bomb goes off in the square. While Secret Service agents Thomas Barnes (
Dennis Quaid) and Kent Taylor (Matthew Fox) try to piece together the clues, camera-toting
bystander Howard Lewis (Forest Whitaker) believes he captured the entire event, including
the shooter, on tape. Similarly, a local police detective (Eduardo Noreiga) assigned to
the mayor believes he knows who did it as well. There are ties to a local insurgency
and Middle Eastern influences. But that's just the superficial version of what happened.
Once everyone's vantage point is explored, the truth becomes warped and quite deadly.
With a plot so knotty and twisted that pretzel makers would worship it, Vantage Point
promises much more than it can ever rationally deliver. Taking an explosive 20-minute
action sequence involving threats to world leaders, secret cabals, and unexpected
alliances, British TV helmer Travis hopes to fashion a clean, lean JFK riff, complete
with conflicting stories and anti-American sentiments. The present policies of the
Bush Administration are slammed again and again here as reporters and administrative
officials lament/extol the "shoot first, diplomacy a distant second" beliefs that,
apparently, have led to this reactionary retaliation. There are moments which are
very heavy-handed in their indirect criticism, as when a hawkish Cabinet member (Bruce
McGill) tries to muscle the Commander in Chief into bombing Morocco.
It's not the only odd moment in a movie filled with frequent surrealism. We learn
that ever since Reagan, the Secret Service has supposedly used doubles to keep the
President out of danger. In practice, the comment feels like nothing more than an
excuse for a bit of awkward screenplay subterfuge. Coincidences also reign supreme.
Whitaker befriends a Spanish mother and her little daughter before the chaos ensues.
Guess who ends up directly in the line of last act fire... and who's in hot pursuit
to save her? Happenstance is so rampant in Vantage Point that it should get a production
credit. Even in the smallest interconnected community, there wouldn't be this much
telltale bending of fate.
Yet it's repetition that really undermines this movie. Aside from a cracking car
chase as part of the drawn-out finale, the revisiting of the crime over and over
again provides little suspense. Indeed, the only thing it does is frustrate the audience,
especially when characters crow "ah ha!" at some hidden piece of information just before
the situation starts to rewind and restart. With many of these revelations bordering
on the ridiculous (including one ID switch that seems impossible, given the ability to do
background checks), Vantage Point violates the first rule of a thriller. It forgets
to keep the viewer at least partially in the loop. From our own outside-looking-in
perspective, things don't seem so pulse pounding. More like forehead slapping.
Clap your hands say yeah.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





