My goodness, it’s 90s action again! Ha ha,
I’ve reviewed a lot of these lately, it seems, and this one, Con Air, is a picture I may well have
tackled back in my old reviewing days, and if I looked I might be able to find
the old notice itself! But I recently watched the picture again, so I can
provide opinions that are popping fresh and hot out of the oven! Hee hee!
I’ve said it so often that the words have
lost all meaning: here, truly, is quintessential 90s action! But I’ve felt the
same about pictures as minor as Passenger 57 or as forgotten as Executive Decision, though if I were applying myself seriously - ha ha! - I might have to give the
title to something like Speed, or
even to the execrable Bad Boys or The Rock! Con Air, for its part, is more the latter than the former: one of
those Bruckheimer crundleburgers that practically bust a nut trying to earn the
baffling critical acclamation “Testosterone Fueled Action!”
Well, here is where the movie scores
highest: in the simplicity of its plot and in its singular cast! Nicolas Cage
pulls out his Sailor Ripley accent, with just a touch of H.I. McDunnough, to
play a man just paroled from years in the pokey, hitching a ride on a plane
with a load of convicts who are all being taken to a big new jail! But soon the
hard cases take over the plane; these include legendarily monstrous criminals
played by the likes of John Malkovich, doing the same sort of thing he did in In the Line of Fire, Steve Buscemi from Escape from L.A. playing a calm maniac,
Ving Rhames from Mission Impossible III
as a Black revolutionary, plus M.C. Gainey from Starman and Django Unchained,
Danny Trejo from Machete, and Mykelti
Williamson from Streets of Fire as
the diabetic buddy! We also get famed instability comedian Dave Chappelle
playing a young wiseacre! Ha ha, so you see what I mean about the cast!
The tensions come from Cage trying to keep
his identity as a parolee from the other cons, and particularly from Malkovich!
Meanwhile, on the ground, John Cusack is trying to figure out how to get what
he constantly refers to as his plane
back down on the ground without blowing it up, which is what hothead Colm
Meaney wishes to do! (To be fair, Meaney has seen this kind of thing before, from when he played a pilot in Die Hard 2!) Up in the plane, where convicts are constantly rooting
through Cage’s stuff and discovering his secret, there are violence fights and
near-misses, and it all ends with a crash in Las Vegas and then a fire truck
fight, and then an over-the-top showcase death for main heavy Malkovich! Ha ha,
he catches a real piledriving right upside the head!
Rachel Ticotin from Total Recall plays the only lady on the flight, and as such becomes
the focus of Danny Trejo’s horrible rapist character! Of course he gets his
just desserts without having a chance to practice his horrible avocation, but,
after enjoying a tea party singalong with a little trailer park girl, Buscemi’s
maniac is allowed to stroll off for a some action at the roulette table! Ha ha,
all of this simply reveals a script that privileges mindless button-pushing
over structure or characterization, or other things a motion picture scenario
usually aspires to!
All it really has to offer are moments
scattered here and there to juice up the audience and make them whoop and say
ha ha! We get scenes like the dumping of Chappelle’s battered corpse from the
plane down to a city street; the destruction of a classic Corvette by use of a
plane, a length of cable, and a hook; and the time Cage rolls under a truck to
avoid an explosion, only to find Dabbs Greer already there! Ha ha! And these
are all fine, and the movie’s 115 minutes move quickly and entertainingly! It’s
clearly aware of its own absurdity, and the cast is just having a ball, but
there’s a forced cynicism and faux edginess to the whole thing that really
wears thin, and some of the special trick effects are pretty bad too! It’s a
movie of its time and doesn’t have the staying power of some of the better 90s
actioners, and so I give Con Air one
and a half bunnies in the box!
I like the way we're supposed to be pleased Buscemi gets away because he's Steve Buscemi, not because he's a violent mass murderer.
ReplyDeleteTotally ridiculous, but Bruckheimer did have a knack for casting these things right. It's fun to see all these thespians of different stripes trying to out-macho one another.
I guess Buscemi's escape is his reward for not butchering the little girl he has a tea party with!
Delete