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DVD Corner: Vantage Point
Danielle Turchiano

The first five minutes of Vantage Point start off strong and with a bang (no pun intended), as Sigourney Weaver and a crew of news producers sit inside a control room, ready to go live with reporters on the scene of a high-profile presidential appearance in Spain. As Weaver gets into a petty squabble with one reporter (Zoe Saldana) over the tone she chose to take in a live shot, a gunshot fires, hitting the president, and the crew scrambles to cover it. The pacing of the movie picks up significantly, as it begins to match the panic-mode of the people in the square, and then comes the one-two punch of an explosion at the base of the hotel in the center of the events. Director Pete Travis chooses to introduce these events--ones that supposedly set up the course for the whole film--to his audience through the limited angles this crew's cameras are able to capture, and in doing so, he doesn't allow viewers access to all of the information just yet. The give a little, hold a lot back approach of Vantage Point shows great potential, but unfortunately it gets old quickly and just ends up frustrating viewers.

It's painfully obvious what is really going on from the first few minutes of Vantage Point, in part because the majority of the plot is covered neatly in its promotional trailers but also due to the fact that the script (by Barry L. Levy) is just not imaginative. The plot is quite thin overall--meaning, the stereotypical bad guys are the bad guys; there are no twists here. Levy, a former teacher who sold Vantage Point as his first screenplay, sets up a few points (such as the fact that the president used a double for his appearance and therefore didn't actually get shot) that--if the film was allowed to play out past the course of the same two violent events over and over and over--would actually offer interesting and unique commentary. It would have been great to see the ramifications after the realization that the public had been duped; it would have been something rooted in reality and just tongue-in-cheek enough to elicit smiles. Instead, Levy's sophomoric style keeps the audience five steps ahead of the movie at any given moment, eliminating any real reason to keep watching.

The film is full of filler, offering the same sequences from varying angles and point of views--from Secret Service agents (Dennis Quaid and Matthew Fox), to a civilian with a video camera (Forest Whitaker) who just happens to be in the right place at the right time, to an up-and-coming terrorist (Said Taghmaoui, who is really too talented for this kind of typecasting). Between the repetition, the slow-mo, the rewind sequences in between POVs and the ungodly amount of running, there is no real plot--just a whole lot of fast motion. The script must have been only 20 pages long and therefore would have made a really clever, really innovative short...or even a Web series.

Vantage Point boasts a huge cast of name talent, none of with whom Travis seems to know what to do. Only Quaid and Whitaker have backstories, as simple as they may be, because Travis instead chooses to focus on convoluted action, muddying the importance of his wide net of supporting players and making the majority of them much more expendable than they perhaps should be. There is really nothing at stake for any of them other than "stay alive," and the few attempts at character connection or dimension--most of which are given to Whitaker--are too on the nose, as if Levy doesn't trust his audiences enough to read facial expressions and Travis doesn't trust his actors to give the right ones. Levy tells when he should show; when Whitaker is alone, he mutters to himself ridiculously, unrealistically and expositionally. There are actual, audible "Oh my Gods" spilling from these awestruck characters' mouths, and suddenly six-foot-tall, hulking men are reduced to melodramatic seventh grade girls. It's fitting, really, that in a film about deception, corruption and violence, the filmmakers themselves proved to be similarly paranoid control freaks, unable to allow their actors just to do their own thing.

Far too much is by chance in this movie, again namely with Whitaker, who happens to stumble all wide-eyed and slack-jawed onto just about everything. Dennis Quaid, too, though, just happens to have luck and timing on his side, finding pieces of the puzzle literally one after the other just dropped at his side, which is really just typical of the arc a once-fallen hero desperate to redeem himself takes in films like Vantage Point. Everything just comes too easily. Travis is far too distracted manufacturing suspense to focus on the huge holes in Levy’s script and just expects audiences to be willing to suspend their disbelief enough to join him on this convenient journey.

What could possibly be left to say about Vantage Point, then, on a two-disc deluxe edition DVD (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, MSRP: $34.95)? Well, first off, you are given three versions of the film: the widescreen, full screen and a digital copy to burn onto your hard drive or tote around with you on a PSP. Special features include a featurette called “An Inside Perspective,” which is really nothing more than hype interviews from the cast and crew but sadly manages to be the most interesting thing on the DVD. There’s also another featurette, “Plotting an Assassination,” which is a semi-in-depth head-scratcher of an interview with Levy; one deleted scene; and an audio commentary with Travis, in which he attempts to give his choices merit but just sounds way too pleased with himself. Like the majority of the film itself, all of these are superfluous.

Vantage Point's concept is clever, and its effort is certainly admirable, but it was just too big for these green filmmakers, and unfortunately they got caught up in its flashy style and eliminated all substance. The result, which is just laughable when it isn't intended to be a comedy, would have been much more successful if Vantage Point was half its length--and at only 90 minutes, that's certainly saying something.

Vantage Point is now available on DVD.


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