While “Battleship” is implausible and overly loud in a lot
of places, as directed by Peter Berg, it’s also energetic and moving and
surprisingly better than I expected. Based on the original paper-and-pencil
game that was developed into a board and video game by Hasbro, it even manages
to include the strategy of deducing the location of opponents’ ships through
guesswork and logic, which is at the heart of the game. Of course, the story is
about more than trying to sink someone’s unseen battleship. In this case, an
alien armada has splashed down in the waters off Hawaii. Responding to the
threat is the US Navy, personified by the crew of the destroyer John Paul Jones and its captain, Alex
Hopper (Taylor kitsch), a young untested lieutenant who is unexpectedly thrust
into the leadership role when the aliens’ initial attack leaves him as the
senior officer. Hopper and his ship are left to face the aliens alone when a
dome-like force field separates them from the rest of the fleet. This, of
course, sets up a cat-and-mouse-like maneuvers that are at the heart of both
the game and the movie.
Several elements add depth and texture to this
straightforward set-up, including Hopper’s inferiority complex about his older,
more seasoned brother (Alexander Skarsgard), a straight-arrow naval commander
whose fate, early in the film, precipitates his younger brother’s maturation.
Hopper also has a girlfriend, Sam (Brooklyn Decker), back in Hawaii, a physical
therapist at a veteran’s hospital whose work with a double amputee (real-life
Army Col. Gregory D. Gadson, making his acting debut) plays a crucial role in
the fate of the ensuing battle. In addition, there’s a shamelessly stirring
twist that involves a group of World War II veterans and the decommissioned battleship,
Missouri. It’s been decades since the
Navy actually used one of these steam-powered ships, but, no surprise,
everything is in working order. The movie’s themes of sacrifice, heroism and
honor maybe old-fashioned, but they still work. You can understand why the Navy
gave Berg full access to their ships and allowed their sailors to be used as
extras. “Battleship” may be overly loud and a bit too long, but it also manages
to entertain. 5/19/12
1 comment:
"Battleship" was an ok alien/shoot-em-up. Pretty creative to take a board game and make a two hour movie.
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