WHITE HOUSE DOWN
(PG-13)
***1/2 (out of 5)
June 28, 2013
STARRING
Channing Tatum as CALE
Jamie Foxx as PRESIDENT SAWYER
Maggie Gyllenhaal as FINNERTY
Jason Clarke as STENZ
Richard Jenkins as RAPHELSON
Joey King as EMILY
James Woods as WALKER
Nicholas Wright as DONNIE THE GUIDE
Jimmi Simpson as TYLER
Studio: Columbia Pictures
Directed by: Roland Emmerich
BY KEVIN CARR
Listen to Kevin’s radio review…
If there’s anything I’ve learned from movies in 2013, it’s that the White House is hella easy to overrun. After all, it’s happened twice already this year.
This time around, Jamie Foxx plays Aaron Eckhardt and Channing Tatum plays Gerard Butler. “White House Down” features virtually the same plot line as “Olympus Has Fallen,” though there are some noticeable difference. For example, this film is rated PG-13, so the invasion sequence is a lot less bloody and not as overtly violent. Also, “White House Down” takes advantage of Channing Tatum’s real acting talent with plenty of comic relief moments.
It’s a return to form for Roland Emmerich, who has yet to top “Independence Day” as a bucket of thoroughly enjoyable popcorn movie. “White House Down” isn’t at that level, but it’s refreshingly better than Emmerich’s last two films, “10,000 B.C.” and “Anonymous.”
It’s also quite different from the disaster flicks “The Day After Tomorrow” and “2012” that he fell into a few years ago. Instead, “White House Down” pushes all the buttons for audience approval with this movie. It’s an insanely convoluted and (at times) downright stupid story, but that’s not the point of this film. It’s got action and excitement, and maybe a bit too much flag waving (at times literally), and it’s exhilarating if not somewhat forgettable.
The story follows Cale (Tatum), a wannabe Secret Service Agent who, after an interview with the agency, takes his daughter (Joey King) on a White House tour. Terrorists storm the White House and take everyone inside hostage, including the President (Foxx). In the spirit of “Die Hard,” Cale is the only person who has a chance of stopping them.
This isn’t the first time that Roland Emmerich has destroyed the White House, and the movie itself gives a nod to that famous scene. However, this assault on the nation’s capital is far more intimate. It’s not as rough to watch as “Olympus Has Fallen” was, but with the large number of civilian hostages (including Cale’s daughter), it can actually be a little more tense.
Of course, the whole premise of the movie is ridiculous, but I’d rather see a movie about terrorists storming our head of government and call it hogwash than to shrug my shoulders and say, “Eh, it could happen.” Like other Presidential thrillers like “Air Force One,” once you get past the set-up, things go a little smoother.
As you might expect, as the terrorists’ plans come to fruition, the movie reaches ludicrous speed. The actual objective of the terrorists amounts to a shaky house of cards that is hard to believe could work, but like the SCUBA tank exploding in the shark’s mouth in “Jaws,” if you are wrapped up in the movie’s pacing and excitement, you won’t care that the plot is damn near impossible.
There’s really not much to say about the film beyond it’s broad audience appeal. It’s not trying to be a great feat of cinema, and it doesn’t achieve that. However, it does achieve being a fun ride in the summer months.
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Not to get political, but just know that if you are anywhere right of MSNBC, you’ll be hating a good bit of this movie. Jamie Foxx looks, talks, and acts exactly like President Obama, including a ridiculously naive foreign policy, which causes the mess. He’s Mr. Cool and beloved by all. The obviously Republican House Leader is the meanie. The haughty and self righteous Maggy Gyllenhall is there throughout to provide a faulty moral basis to the leadership at the worst possible moments, and each time her advice is child-like and ill-conceived. And the bad guys are pretty much every boogeyman on the left’s target list. Wait till you get a load of who is really behind everything (the most hated of all boogeymen).
I’m a glutton for disaster movies so I was going to see it, fully expecting a little Obama love. This was definitely over the top, to the point it chapped my ass enough to write this comment. I will say it has some good action and is moderately entertaining overall if you don’t care about political things. But just be prepared to be annoyed at Hollywood once again trying to cram a ridiculous agenda into what could have been an otherwise better movie. Olympus Has Fallen was much more entertaining in my book (although ridiculous in its own way).
Yeah, the politics behind the film were not very subtle, but that’s Roland Emmerich. The President in Independence Day was basically Bill Clinton, and the President in 2012 was another version of Obama. But yes, it was pretty excessive here. Over all the years watching movies, I’ve learned to just expect this from a lot of directors. Between the two, I preferred Olympus Has Fallen, but it was equally preposterous.