Monday, August 08, 2022

A geographically challenged movie

I tried watching Netflix's The Gray Man but had to give up after about 30 minutes.

Look, I thought for the first 10 or so minutes I was willing to go along with it - our hero seemed to have a conscience and wouldn't kill an innocent by standing kid, and the subsequent fight around fireworks going off was at least different.   

But the first warning that this movie was going off the rails was the apparent overnight trip by tuk tuk from Bangkok to Chang Mai.  Wait a minute, I thought:  isn't Chang Mai way in the middle of the country, at elevation, and no way you would make the trip overnight by tuk tuk.   And I was right - Google says it's nearly 700 km, and there are posts from Thai media apparently indicating that tourists who are thinking about copying the trip are saying "The Gray Man lied to me".   I think I saw someone saying you would more realistically allow 5 days (I assume tuk tuks are not known for good speed or climbing performance) but who knows, that might be an exaggeration in the other direction.

But then we had a terribly staged and edited CGI heavy plane flight and mid air struggle for a parachute that was completely and utterly unconvincing and mundane.   (And it started stupidly - no indication of how our hero anticipated that he was about to be stabbed by someone who had appeared to be an old friend.)   It only served to remind me of the actual quality stuntwork of Mission Impossible films, or nearly any Bond film, and how this whole sequence suffered from Marvel over-reliance on CGI, which replaces dramatic stakes with movement and colour. 

Then there was a very short shot which I am pretty sure was meant to show an Australian based quasi military hit squad of some kind getting on an aircraft - with the Sydney Harbour Bridge in the background.  As if there was a runway at Garden Island instead of a naval base.  [I double checked this last night - the Opera House is there too, so yeah, it's as if they are getting on a significantly sized military aircraft either at Woolloomooloo Wharf, or Garden Island.]   

As I said, geography is not a strong point of the film, despite it repeatedly jumping around the world.

There followed a painfully badly written bit of dialogue between our hero and a teen girl he was to protect, and I gave up.

I see that it has scored only 46% on Rottentomatoes, although a suspiciously high audience score of 91%.   Is it possible that Netflix, having allegedly spent a couple of hundred million dollars, has paid for some positive audience feedback via some PR company?  It can't be hard to organise that, surely.

Anyway, I am starting to worry about Netflix and whoever it is that is greenlighting projects.

When I think about it, the things that have been "working" for the network have been pretty original (even if I don't endorse them) - like Squid Games, The Queen's Gambit, even Stranger Things is kind of original even if deliberately 80's retro.   What about the Roma movie - a black and white family drama set in Mexico in the 1960's - pretty original. 

But when they come to recent movies, it feels mainly like very tired retreads of old movie tropes that heavily rely on star power to generate interest.   And for me, that's not enough.* 

 

*  Alert readers might think "what about The Power of the Dog, which was pretty original, but you didn't like that."  Ah well, my rationalisation for that was that it was a retread of tired Jane Campion tropes, and she's never interested me. 


4 comments:

  1. I watched that recently and it is abysmal. The aircraft scene is ridiculous.

    Apart from that Steve I often search out non-English movies because of the variety but that can be difficult when watching with company because you have to remain clued to the screen for the sub-titles.

    For something completely different, The Thing About Pam might be worth a look.

    While I'm here, look up the farcical situation with the French nuclear reactors. They have to reduce output because the river water is too warm and they are experiencing the worst drought in history. I love the irony of that.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/aug/03/edf-to-reduce-nuclear-power-output-as-french-river-temperatures-rise

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  2. Yes, John, I enjoy finding decent foreign films too - in fact, the foreign content on Netflix has been one of the most enjoyable things about it for me. (Which I didn't really expect.)

    I usually review good foreign films here when I see one. Did you ever watch, for example, the very decent French fight/car action film Lost Bullet, which I mentioned favourably here last year? Surprisingly good.

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  3. I usually review good foreign films here when I see one. Did you ever watch, for example, the very decent French fight/car action film Lost Bullet, which I mentioned favourably here last year? Surprisingly good.

    Thanks, will chase it up. The French movie Anthony Zimmer is a great crime\thriller movie.

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  4. I have made the trip between Bangkok (These Thais don't fuck around when naming their cities) And Chiang Mai a few times. And its best done as this very slow sleeper, that crawls up the hills sometimes at a walking pace. It takes all night at the least but also much of the day.

    So yeah. You aint getting there on a tuk tuk. You barely making it out of Bangkok's traffic on a tuk tuk in that time.

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