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Paycheck
Sadly, our Frank discovers this film is one Paycheck not worth
necessarily cashing or depositing as Woo waters down his boisterously
banal and generic thriller all too convincingly.
Paycheck (2003) Paramount Pictures.
1 hour 59 minutes. Starring: Ben Affleck, Aaron Eckhart, Uma Thurman,
Paul Giamatti, Colm Feore, Joe Morton, Michael C. Hall. Directed
by John Woo.
Ardent
fans of action-packed filmmaker John Woo will be lost for words
when checking out his latest sci-fi thriller Paycheck.
And that's a shame because Woo, the master of visceral
movie mayhem, is the ideal artist to pull off the concept of bringing
author Philip K. Dick's early 1950s short story about memory-for-profit
and making it an outrageous event to remember. Sadly, this is one
Paycheck not worth necessarily cashing or depositing because Woo
waters down this boisterously banal and generic thriller all too
convincingly.
Woo had everything going for him that would ensure the stimulating
success of his science fiction actioner. The casting of Bennifer
media boy wonder Ben Affleck certainly couldn't hurt the box office
interests.
Plus, the injection of Woo's kinetic style of filmmaking is a
cause for curiosity in checking out the big screen goods. And let's
not forget the impeccable reputation of Dick's colorful and imaginative
literary stories that beg for a sharply whimsical cinematic adaptation.
So what then went wrong with Woo's techno-tale of a cyberspace wizard
selling his memory capacity to the highest bidder?
Let's
see and could it be the casting of wooden Gigli guru Affleck who
stiffly goes through the motions of ducking and dodging the contrived
action-oriented obstacles that his giddy director tosses in front
of him in an effort to generate excitement?
Maybe it's the lethargic acting or spotty writing from Dean Georgaris
(Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life) that contributes to
the uneven energy that lags thanks to an overwrought trivial script?
Perhaps it's the blatant knockoff of Woo's protrusive project to
try and drain some of the similar themes that were previously demonstrated
in contemporary sci-fi fare such as 1991's Total Recall? Heck, Woo
even includes traces of a Hitchcockian subtext to elevate the transparent
suspenseful elements. Possibly we could point our attention to the
dippy dialogue or the rudimentary-placed gunplay and explosions
and the exaggerated chase scenes that seem to go on endlessly?
More importantly, Dick's intellectual vision for the material is
compromised by Woo's insistence on providing popcorn-induced platitudes
to make this story jump through hoops for mainstream consumption.
Hence, Paycheck becomes flagrantly silly-minded and stilted by the
outlandish moment.
Futuristic computer engineer Michael Jennings (Affleck) is up for
hire depending on what service he can offer to those who are interested.
Classified as a genius mind, Michael is able to concoct top secret
projects for companies looking to capitalize on his creativity.
The only stipulation is that Michael needs to have his memory erased
of whatever hush-hush endeavor he conjured up for his sources. After
all, he must abide by the company's secrecy agreement. Things begin
to pick up financially when Michael wheels and deals with various
outfits looking to buy segments of his memory as long as they are
willing to pay him the smooth cash for the privilege to do so.
It isn't long before the opportunistic Michael is approached by
an old collegiate pal Jim Rethrick (Aaron Eckhart, The Core) about
using his memory in a daring three-year project that is his ambitious
undertaking to date. Jim is a tycoon loaded with the megabucks so
money is no object as far as meeting Michael's memory-trading hefty
price tag. Michael's trusty sidekick Shorty (Paul Giamatti) is rather
skeptical about this particular experimentation.
Nevertheless, Michael decides to go ahead with Jim's risky project.
Sure enough, the process is quick and calming. Michael awakes three
years into the future to claim his lucrative payday that was promised
before he assumed taking on the project. Unfortunately, there was
no payoff but instead the personal items he had left in an envelope
in anticipation that these things would jog his memory. Well, no
such luck. The only real revelation that Michael encounters is the
harsh reality that determined forces want to see him captured and
eventually eliminated - permanently!
How appropriate that Woo's awkward sci-fi nutty narrative is about
memory loss seeing as though this convoluted clunker is utterly
forgettable. Paycheck isn't even that visually pleasing from the
viewpoint that one would expect an entrancing representation of
the future that echoed the same glittery and gothic landscapes that
were found in previous Dick-related on-screen utopias such as Minority
Report or the inferior Imposter for that matter.
The collaboration of Woo's staid direction and Georgaris's flaccid
screenplay doesn't invite anything that spectacular to the proceedings.
Woo still does maintain some of his flash when blowing objects to
kingdom come and his action sequences show some innovative motion-like
ingenuity when the occasion calls for it. Still, this is not enough
to overcome how superficially lightweight Woo's frenetic flick is
in its flat execution.
Woo's leading man Affleck doesn't fit the bill and is probably
one of the major reasons why this film seems so shaky from a dramatic
perspective. If Affleck is not mugging for the camera at the most
inopportune time then he's going through this jittery tale with
all the flexibility of a broomstick. Affleck's heroics are uneventful
and unintentionally absurd.
Pairing him up with the likes of the usually dependent Uma Thurman
(Kill Bill Vol. 1 and 2) portraying a kissy-kissy biologist is ill-advised
and their love interest for one another comes off as routinely artificial.
The supporting players breeze through with nothing much to give
artistically besides assuming the skin of standard arbitrary roles,
especially Joe Morton as a cantankerous FBI operative or Colm Feore
doing his sketchy Bad Guy 101 bit.
As for story development, Paycheck takes its liberties to be implausible
and incoherent as far as some major plot devices are concerned.
Sure, there can be leeway for acknowledging some suspension of belief
but Woo demands the audience to swallow his frantic foolishness
a bit too much. As to whatever gaffs that are evident or sense of
bewilderment that may pop up in your noggin, Woo drowns out the
frivolous flaws by inundating his high-voltage vehicle with nonsensical
fistfights and other combative kookiness to spice up the futile
festivities.
Hopefully Woo can use this meager Paycheck and buy back his credibility
as a masterful Hong Kong moviemaker who knows how to helm solidly
vibrant actioners that roar and soar with fierce conviction.
Frank Ochieng
(c) Frank Ochieng 2004
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OTHER CONTENT - February 2004
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The
Man Who Sold the Moon
Scots SF author Ken Macleod reckons that watching George W. Bush's recent speech
at NASA felt like science fiction coming true. But reservations ... well, he's
got a few.
(COMMENT)
Human
Stories of Mars
The successful landing of the NASA rover Spirit in Gusev Crater on Mars has
caught the world's imagination, but England's favourite hard SF author, Stephen
Baxter, thinks that our attention will soon move on.
(ARTICLES)
Sixty-Two
And A Half Miles High
Scottish SF writer Rod MacDonald on the X Prize Foundation and the strange British
dreams of a privately funded space race.
(ARTICLES)
Starfleet
In Motion
There's rather a lot of crew on a Federation starship. So apart from jogging
around a lot during a red alert, what the heck do they all do? Uncle Geoff muses
on the unlucky blue shirts who draw the Enterprise's toilet duty.
(ARTICLES)
Offworld
Report: Science Fiction & Fantasy - Feb '04
Authors Brian Aldiss, Lucius Shepard, Robert Sheckley, Stephen Baxter and Gene
Wolfe are interviewed, as is Kim Stanley Robinson, whose latest novel is somewhat
... wet. There's also new articles by Isaac Asimov, James Patrick Kelly and
John Clute.
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report: Weird Science - Feb '04
Plenty of articles on Mars missions and moon bases, a look back at the top scientific
advances of 2003, a new supersolid state of matter is discovered, and why the
Earth's magnetic field is fading fast.
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report: Comics, Manga and Anime - Feb '04
An Alan Moore retrospective, another look at Tank Girl, and why poor old Captain
America is now awakening in a parallel reality where the Nazis won WWII and
control the USA ... hmmm, a bit of politics, anyone?
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report: Roleplaying Games - Feb '04
Why presenting an RPG player with impossible choices helps makes for a great
game, a look at the secret lives of Wood Elves, and a free PDF rules download
for the 28mm figures wargame Cobalt-2 from Westwind.
(NEWS)
Paycheck
Sadly, our Frank discovers this film is one Paycheck not worth necessarily cashing
or depositing as Woo waters down his boisterously banal and generic thriller
all too convincingly.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Peter
Pan
Visually vibrant and mystical in its charming presentation, Franks happily discovers
Hogan's live action take on Peter Pan is an exquisite and sparkling celluloid
fable that just pops into life.
(FILM REVIEWS)
The
Return of the King
Inherently grand, vibrant, inviting and whimsically overwhelming, Jackson packs
an urgent sense of vitality into this third installment that will certainly
amaze those who were attentive to the previous colorful two TLoTR epics.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Peter
Pan
In this new movie, Mark discovers a feast for the eyes that he can recommend
with more conviction for parents than he can for the children who might see
it.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Sea
of Souls
Interviews with actors Bill Paterson and Archie Panjabi, stars of the BBC's
shortly-to-be-released new X Files-style television series, 'Sea of Souls'.
(INTERVIEWS)
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