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Olympus Has Fallen (2013)
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Gerard Butler, Aaron Eckhart, Morgan Freeman, Angela Bassett, Dylan McDermott, Rick Yune. |
Director: |
Antoine Fuqua |
Genre: |
Action | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 08/13/2013 |
Tagline: When our flag falls our nation will rise.
When the White House (Secret Service Code: "Olympus") is captured and the President (Aaron Eckhart) is kidnapped by a terrorist mastermind, disgraced former Presidential guard, Mike Banning (Gerard Butler), moves to action. As the national security team
scrambles to respond, the secret service ground team is wiped out and it's up to Banning to retake the White House, save the President and avert an even bigger crisis. Directed by Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) and also starring Morgan Freeman, Angela
Bassett, Melissa Leo, Ashley Judd and Rick Yune.
Storyline: When the White House (Secret Service Code: "Olympus") is captured by a terrorist mastermind and the President is kidnapped, disgraced former Presidential guard Mike Banning finds himself trapped within the building. As our national
security team scrambles to respond, they are forced to rely on Banning's inside knowledge to help retake the White House, save the President and avert an even bigger disaster. Written by FilmDistrict
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman on July 23, 2013 -- In Director Antoine Fuqua's (Tears of the Sun, Shooter) Olympus Has Fallen, Action star Gerard Butler finds himself in the line of fire portraying Author Vince
Flynn's Mitch Rapp, a highly skilled government operative who, when the White House is taken over by terrorists, finds himself the only man standing between terrorist victory and American defeat. No, wait. That's not right. Let's try again. In Olympus
Has Fallen, Gerard Butler plays a skilled New York cop named John McClane who finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, "alone, tired...and the only chance anyone has got" against a group of heavily armed terrorists who have seized control
of a building. Right? Oh, wrong again. OK, one last try. In Olympus Has Fallen, Mr. Butler plays Mike Banning, an ex-Secret Service agent forced back into action after he wiggles his way into a blown-out and bullet-ridden White House, the only man
preventing a terrorist victory, the death of a beloved American President, and all sorts of other evil schemes that could spell doom for the United States and the free world. Yes, finally. That's it. Mountains of similarities to other, better works of
fiction though there may be, Olympus Has Fallen makes for a well above-average thrill ride in the shoot 'em up Action style. It borrows very liberally and quite frequently, no doubt, but Fuqua, one of Hollywood's most talented and arguably most
underrated craftsmen, skillfully puts all the pieces together and constructs a movie that should delight Action fans to no end.
When an accident leaves U.S. President Benjamin Asher (Aaron Eckhart) a broken man, he distances himself from the Secret Service agent who was present at the time of the accident and made a choice that forever changed the President's life. Now an
ex-Secret Service agent, Mike Banning (Gerard Butler) has taken a pencil-pushing job at Treasury. It's been a year-and-a-half after the accident. The President has moved on as well as he can and finds himself dealing with a tense situation on the Korean
peninsula that could shatter decades of relative peace between the Communist dictatorship in the north and the U.S. ally in the south. Asher's hand is about to be forced, one way or the other, and none of his options look promising. But the situation is
about to become significantly more dynamic. The South Korean Prime Minster visits the White House for emergency talks, but his meeting with Asher is cut short when disaster strikes. An airborne gunship attacks the White House and surrounding areas. Ground
forces penetrate the White House's defenses and a full-on siege turns into the occupation of the most heavily fortified building in the world. Scores of people -- including dozens of Secret Service agents -- are killed in the fight. Mike hurriedly makes
his way to the White House and manages to survive the attack undetected. Now, he's the only man standing between the terrorists and a scheme that is sure to forever alter the course of humanity. Meanwhile, with the President and Vice President out of the
picture, Speaker of the House Allan Trumbull (Morgan Freeman) is promoted to acting President and forced to make the hardest decisions of his life with only one man on the inside to help guide him down the right path.
All of the Transfer of Power and Die Hard (and never mind White House Down) comparisons aside, Olympus Has Fallen makes for a sturdy, rugged, dependable Action flick that's almost completely devoid of originality, a bit short
on substance, and even shorter on unpredictability. What it does well, however, it does extremely well, and that's paint a vivid, nearly no-frills picture of a nation's capital under bloody siege. The action is tight and exciting, even if it seems
a bit far-fetched to believe that an admittedly sophisticated, well-organized, and for the most part intelligent faction could pull off the impossible. Set aside notions of reality, suspend disbelief, turn off the brain, and enjoy the ride. Antoine Fuqua
has crafted a picture that pays attention to the little things even in the midst of a mindless plot and nearly incessant action. He makes sure the movie is fun above all else. There's a serious edge to the film -- it plays a bit more seriously than
even Die Hard -- but there's no mistaking the movie as anything but raw popcorn entertainment, even as it elevates above the usual junk Action filler and embraces and displays the best the genre has to offer.
Olympus Has Fallen not only earns a boost with a skilled director in the chair but also with a top-tier cast in front of the camera. Butler plays his part very well. He's no Bruce Willis, for sure, but then again the character as scripted is a
little more to-the-point and not a hybrid action hero/normal guy/comic relief rolled into one. He has some choice moments of dialogue that earn a laugh, but he's more or less all business and goes about that business of killing bad guys very well, doing
so sometimes casually or nonchalantly, a manner that suits the style of the film and the gravity of the situation both very well. Butler seems to feel at home under the gear, behind the gun, and in the bloodied action spotlight. Aaron Eckhart is
rock-solid as the President and draws out a likable, real-guy sort of flair from the character. His relationship with his wife and son, his friendship with Mike, his seriousness in the Oval Office, and his leadership qualities under duress are all
audience-friendly, believable, or both. He's not the most dynamic fictional President film has ever seen, but Eckhart nails the components for the character as required for this film. There's a high quality supporting cast that's uniformly excellent,
including Morgan Freeman as the Speaker of the House thrust into Presidential duty. Angela Bassett, Radha Mitchell, Cole Hauser, and Dylan McDermott are also strong, though the film's biggest disappointment comes when McDermott's character undergoes a
sudden transformation about two-thirds of the way through the film that comes way too suddenly and far too easily in the name of simple plot advancement, allowing the film an easy out rather than taking a tougher route towards the end. All in all, though,
Olympus Has Fallen really its quite a spectacular Action movie in the classic mindless entertainment category done big and done right.
Olympus Has Fallen doesn't find the same character depth or intensity, the real human feeling, or the raw gritty emotion as found in Antoine Fuqua's best work (and one of the best movies of the last twenty years), Training Day, but the
underrated director does bring a powerful, mostly no-frills style to the movie that helps it move beyond the unmistakable sense of déjà vu that permeates nearly very scene. He also gives the movie a serious edge without moving it beyond the arena of
popcorn sensationalism. It's a quality balance and the film is better off taking a more serious edge rather than forcing in lame characters and even lamer comic relief. Audiences looking for high art should already know to skip, but Action fans won't find
a significantly better product this year. Sony's Blu-ray release of Olympus Has Fallen offers slightly disappointing video, nearly flawless audio, and a fair array of extras. Highly recommended.
Trivia:- Winona Ryder was the studio's first choice to play the First Lady.
- The role of the Secret Service director was originally written for a man. Director Antoine Fuqua persuaded Angela Bassett to audition and then had the role re-written for a woman.
- Morgan Freeman was filming the crisis room scenes in Louisiana at the height of his Internet death hoax. He often began each day of filming by serenading the extras with old jazz songs and endeared himself to the unsuspecting crew with pranks.
- This is the fourth film in which Morgan Freeman and Ashley Judd have appeared in together, but this is the first time that their characters do not share any screen time together. The first three films they worked together in were Kiss the Girls , High
Crimes and Dolphin Tale.
- The intruding aircraft is a modified version of the Lockheed AC-130 Gunship, initially used in the last days of the Vietnam war. In the movie it features Gatling guns on both sides of the plane, whereas the real aircraft only has air-to-ground
armament on one side to strafe ground troops.
- While the film's choice of North Korea as the driver of the plot and source of the villains was widely viewed as prescient when a number of real-world tensions between the DPRK and the U.S. emerged in 2013, the script and production made that choice
years earlier. Director Antoine Fuqua said in an interview that he did not want the film's villains to be from the Middle East, a choice he felt had been covered to the point of saturation in other films, and that North Korea was interesting to him
because it was a country that was completely closed off to the outside world and therefore projected a sense of no one really knowing what it wanted or was capable of doing.
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[CSW] -3.2- This film delivers exactly what it set out to, lots of action. Think of it as Die Hard in the White House with Gerard Butler instead of Bruce Willis. It is well made, well written and overall a good film for its genre. The main differences
between this film and Die Hard for instance is that the violence is a little more intense and realistic, while the humor, although there on occasion is not as prevalent. It's only drawbacks are it doesn't break a lot of new ground and may be a bit too
close for comfort with today's current world events unfolding as they are. Also, if you were traumatized by 911, you may want to skip this film due to the terrorist elements played out in it. It's a good film for any adrenalin junky out there.
[V3.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box motion codes were available at the time of this rental although they are available now.
Cast Notes: Gerard Butler (Mike Banning), Aaron Eckhart (President Benjamin Asher), Finley Jacobsen (Connor), Dylan McDermott (Forbes), Rick Yune (Kang), Morgan Freeman (Speaker Trumbull), Angela Bassett (Secret Service Director Lynn Jacobs),
Melissa Leo (Secretary of Defense Ruth McMillan), Radha Mitchell (Leah), Cole Hauser (Roma), Phil Austin (Vice President Charlie Rodriguez), James Ingersoll (Admiral Nathan Hoenig), Freddy Bosche (Diaz), Lance Broadway (O'Neil), Sean O'Bryan (Ray Monroe).
IMDb Rating (08/13/13): 6.5/10 from 74,185 users
IMDb Rating (05/17/13): 7.0/10 from 26,931 users
Additional information |
Copyright: |
2013, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
Features: |
While there is no commentary track, Olympus Has Fallen does contains several featurettes.
- Bloopers (HD, 2:26).
- The Epic Ensemble (HD, 6:58): A look at Antoine Fuqua's direction and an overview of the main cast's work.
- Under Surveillance: The Making of Olympus Has Fallen (HD, 11:36): Cast and crew examine the core story, the process of fleshing out the idea, Antoine Fuqua's vision of the film as a "cautionary tale," the plausibility of the plot,
technical consultation, creating a conceivably real assault on the White House, shooting in Louisiana standing in for Washington, set construction, and the role of both digital and practical effects.
- Deconstructing the Black Hawk Sequence (HD, 3:30): A detailed, inside look at digitally creating one of the film's biggest action pieces.
- Ground Combat: Fighting the Terrorists (HD, 3:02): An examination of Fuqua's insistence on reality and choreographing the action scenes.
- Creating the Action: VFX and Design (HD, 7:03): A broader examination of the film's visual effects.
- Previews: Additional Sony titles.
- DVD Copy (<-- Given Away).
- UV Digital Copy (<-- Given Away).
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Subtitles: |
English SDH, English, Spanish |
Video: |
Widescreen 2.40:1 Color Screen Resolution: 1080p Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
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Time: |
2:00 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
UPC: |
043396425972 |
Coding: |
[V3.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
Yes |
Other: |
Producers: Gerard Butler, Mark Gill, Ed Cathell; Directors: Antoine Fuqua; running time of 120 minutes; Packaging: Slipcover in original pressing. Rated R for strong violence and language throughout. (Codes added
08/16/2013) Blu-ray Only --- (DVD and UV-Digital Copy --> Given Away)
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