2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
RED EYE is a Craven Effort., 21 July 2010
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The setup of RED EYE is thriller-worthy: a charming stranger (Cillian
Murphy) insinuates himself into the good graces of a young woman
traveling alone (Rachel McAdams) on a Red Eye flight from Dallas to
Miami. The exposition is dynamic: because she is virtually trapped in
the airplane, seated beside him, the stranger's beguiling attitude
suddenly becomes very cold as he outlines a plot to her - he holds her
father hostage (a very slim, very underused Brian Cox), to blackmail
her into being complicit in the assassination of a senator.
But the denouement is dreary: like the Red Eye flight their characters
spend most of the movie on, director Wes Craven and writers, Carl
Ellsworth and Dan Foos have nowhere to go but down, as we once again
realize that American senators DO NOT get assassinated in American
movies of this weak-chested ilk. This is not an Oliver Stone or Clint
Eastwood film - those guys can get away with almost anything - this is
Wes Craven, the man who brought us THE HILLS HAVE EYES (1977), SWAMP
THING (1982) and SCREAM (1996). No big leaps of bravura. Consequently,
the outrageous assassination attempt (launching a rocket from a boat in
the ocean to the penthouse suite of a hotel on the shore) reeks of
desperation to inject the dragging plot with some kind of Van Damme-ish
audacity.
But as the movie drags on, the longer it keeps going, the less and less
it compels, until the last act's obligatory and interminable Chase
Sequences only serve to dull an already blunt climax.
Like reading this review, by the end of the movie, you find yourself
asking, "Is that it?"
Yes. Yes it is.
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