BEHIND ENEMY LINES
Playing a Navy pilot shot down over Bosnia, indie writer/actor Owen Wilson is
indeed behind enemy lines -- the enemy being Hollywood at its loudest and most
jingoistic. His is a dangerous mission, but remind yourself that if he makes it
out alive, he'll spend his paycheck making his own worthwhile movies, like
Rushmore and Bottle Rocket. No such excuse for co-star Gene "Putting the Hack
Into" Hackman, who already made this movie with 1988's Bat 21. This flashy
trash is yet another debut by a TV-commercial director, and yet another
wardrobe full of the Cinematographer's New Clothes. John Moore is Irish (which
may explain why the hero's parachute is orange, white, and green), but he knows
how to make a US military recruitment ad. It's just like selling soap --
heat-seeking exploding soap.
So propagandist it actually includes a product placement for defense
contractor Northrop Grumman, the film seems clairvoyantly tailored for
post-September 11 crowds (never mind that it's about us protecting Muslims --
the term is discreetly omitted). After making a feint at complexity, Behind
Enemy Lines offers up an evil-incarnate foreign villain and others identified
as friendly because they drink Coca-Cola and dress like Elvis. It exemplifies
the arrogance that makes much of the world hate our guts; but it also idealizes
that arrogance, and audiences are clearly in the mood to enjoy the great
American pastime of oversimplification. At the Apple Valley, Campus,
Entertainment, Flagship, Hoyts Providence 16, Opera House, Showcase, and
Tri-Boro cinemas.
Issue Date: December 7 - 13, 2001
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