OK ladies and gentlemen, for the inaugural post I chose to go with a movie I watched this past week, a little film called…
The Tourist
So the tourist starts off with a little stage setting scene in which the main premise of Scotland Yard’s hunt for a mysterious wanted man who it seems has some sort of relationship with Angelina Jolie’s character. The rest of the movie unfolds in traditional fashion, introducing characters (we meet Johnny Depp on a train soon after) and laying on motivation and context for the events, but the movie never really does sucks you in.
Ricky Gervais joked about the two dimensional characters, but at the heart of it that is the main flaw of the movie. The rest of the characters dance around the main two, drifting in and out of the film with little individual time granted to them. This is especially true of Paul Bettany and Timothy Dalton, both great actors who have little detail or depth given to their characters. The storyline seems like it should be delving deeper into the two main characters, making us sympathise and identify with them, and actually create complex characters which you would expect in a romance and mystery laced drama like this.
Unfortunately this never happens. Angelina Jolie looks as beautiful as ever but she never really does anything of note… just stands there and looks pretty. Her character is supposed to have this burning passion for the mystery man, but this is never really explained nor did I find myself at all interested in it. Johnny Depp plays the somewhat naïve American quite well, but again his character never really develops much until the end where **spoiler alert** he has a complete personality shift and moves from awkward math teacher to calm, cool and confident hero in the space of a scene change.
I also feel like I need to point out this major problem I had with the film. If Scotland Yard didn’t know that their mystery man wasn’t a 5’5 Arab, what does it matter what the guy on the train that she picks looks like? This little addition into the script, along with a few other little noticeable flaws right off the bat, allowed me to figure out how the film would end before we had even hit the 20 min marker. Which to be blunt took away any sort of anticipation for the rest of the movie. I would imagine this is the case for quite a few, and even if you didn’t piece it together then you probably had before it got to the big end reveal anyways.
In a movie like this, where action and plot really don’t drive the picture, it falls to the characters. Unfortunately they couldn’t quite carry it. Combine this with uneven pacing and a rather boring plot full of huge holes which fail to hide the final surprise makes this film not all that memorable.
It’s one of those movies where you’re very much aware you are watching a movie. In fact with the nice footage of Venice, this movie could be edited into a fun little travel advertisement for the city…
Overall Rating C