| The
Terminal Movie Review
Afflicted with a chronic, and
ultimately fatal, attack of the cutes, Steven Spielberg's
The Terminal is his slightest film to date.
Though undoubtedly imbued
with the master craftsman touch, he and Tom Hanks have
made a Roberto Benigni movie without Roberto Benigni.
The "funny foreigner makes me laugh" shtick
is what comes across here instead of the "fish-out-of-water
and starting to evolve" story they attempted to
make. Hanks plays the funny foreigner, Victor Navorski,
who finds himself without a country, and trapped inside
the confines of John F. Kennedy International Airport,
when his Eastern European homeland of Krakoshia experiences
a military coup. Since the US doesn't recognize the
current regime it can't recognize Victor's status, thus
he can't leave the airport or he'll risk being deported.
Particularly damaging,
right off to the film, is Spielberg's inability to make
any of this plausible to us. First off--and it's minor
but it adds up--we see the airport's Homeland Security
officer, Frank Dixon (the ever-great Stanley Tucci),
fingering a group of Chinese tourists as smugglers.
The tourists do indeed seem to be hiding something for
they take off like madmen, dashing through the airport.
Navorski is sitting on a bench when he's approached
by Dixon's right-hand guard, Ray Thurman (Barry Shabaka
Henley) and asked to come with him. In the background
a few of the Chinese tourists are still seen bolting
along in the background. Thurman does nothing. Right
there he is no longer a security officer, he's just
an actor playing one and no more serious about this
than we should be.
That throw-away joke
is just one of a series (look for a juggling waiter
later) that Spielberg allows, probably instigated, and
his inability to walk away from that easy mark irreparably
harms the whole of the film. There was a time when Spielberg
built our confidence and stashed our credibility until
the end, when he'd cash in on it in spectacular, and
satisfactory fashion. But in his recent films, Catch
Me If You Can (Hanks's Carl Hanratty pulls out the lone
red sock that turned his wash load pink) and Minority
Report (the jet pack cooks the hamburgers on the grill),
he keeps returning to us like a teenager at an ATM machine.
What follows is just
as damaging. It's a long talking head sequence where
Dixon explains to Victor why his passport has been confiscated,
and why he can't leave the international confines of
the airport, even though it's well established halfway
through the conversation that Navorski can't understand
English. Thurman gets in the act too, throwing in further
points of clarification. Spielberg wants to make the
point that the bureaucratic system has them so ingrained
with procedure that they continue on in the exposition
even though they're relatively aware that Navorski doesn't
understand a word they're saying. He does, however,
seem to get the notion that he can't leave the airport,
though I'm hard pressed to say how.
Where the film does
shine are the sequences that probably attracted these
two in the first place, a kind of Cast Away survival
story within the confines of a very civilized environment.
Viktor learns that returning carts will earn him quarters
and soon becomes the airport's unofficial cart shepherd.
He gets a construction job after building a beautiful
cornice. He helps a fellow airport employee, Enrique
Cruz (Diego Luna), woo a customs official (Zoë
Saldana). He earns the respect of the airport staff
by defusing a potentially dangerous situation with an
upset immigrant. It's very winning and told straight.
The rest of it, however,
is not so straight, and, frankly, provides the kind
of sentimentality that hasn't been this obvious (with
the same level of talent involved) since Patch Adams.
Navorski falls for a gorgeous and incredibly unstable
airline stewardess, played by the getting-prettier-by-the-minute
Catherine Zeta-Jones, which causes slipping and silliness.
A sub-plot with a mysterious can of Planters peanuts
and Navorski's real reason for coming to America have
no heft after all the shenanigans and rim-shots.
But the real prat-fall
here is Spielberg's. I don't care if we have to get
through this middling fare as long as he's working,
keeping fit, trying new things. He'll get back up again.
And something he learned making The Terminal will make
the cinema the richer, even if it isn't the film itself.
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