Hunter Killer (2018) [Blu-ray]
Action | Thriller
Tagline: Start a Battle to Stop a War
Deep under the Arctic Ocean, American submarine Captain Joe Glass (Gerard Butler, Olympus Has Fallen, 300) is on the hunt for a U.S. sub in distress when he discovers a secret Russian coup is in the offing, threatening to dismantle the world order.
Captain Glass must now assemble an elite group of Navy SEALs to rescue the kidnapped Russian president and sneak through enemy waters to stop WWIII.
Storyline: A U.S. submarine, the USS Tampa Bay, vanishes while shadowing a Russian Akula-class submarine in the Arctic. Rear Admiral John Fisk sends a Virginia-class submarine, the USS Arkansas, under the command of
newly-promoted and unorthodox Commander Joe Glass to investigate. At the same time, a Navy SEAL team under the command of Lieutenant Bill Beaman is sent in to discreetly observe a Russian naval base, but their mission is swiftly complicated when
Martinelli, the team's new DM recruit, is rendered unconscious during the HALO drop. When they arrive at the naval base, they witness defense minister Dmitri Durov conducting a coup d'eta and taking Russian President Zakarin prisoner, and swiftly realize
that Durov intends to trigger a war.
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, January 25, 2019 It's maybe just a little odd in a supplement included on this Blu-ray to hear Gerard Butler wax enthusiastic about Hunter Killer as a "passion project" of his
that he evidently fostered for years before it was ever produced. Typically many pet projects of leading lights of the film industry can tend to be a little on the eccentric side, which is of course one reason why they can tend not to be produced
quickly. But in the case of Hunter Killer, there's virtually nothing in the film that hasn't been seen before, and it's notable that even Butler refers to what he calls the "submarine genre" as not having been exploited lately, one reason he was so
amped up to get Hunter Killer on the big screen. Interestingly, Butler and other talking heads in the featurette discuss that one of the things delaying the film's production was that relations with Russia had improved at one point so much that
making them the perceived "enemies" in the film was deemed unrealistic. That's arguably a bit of weird reasoning, since Hunter Killer actually promotes a relationship between two submarine commanders, an American named Joe Glass (Gerard
Butler) and a Russian named Sergei Andropov (Michael Nykvist), who work together to undercut a coup taking place in Russia. Even the coup aspect would seem to subliminally suggest that Russia isn't a monolithic enemy in this piece, but one way or the
other Hunter Killer ends up playing like a kind of weird mashup of elements in The Hunt For Red October and Seven Days in May.
The film begins with a brief prelude of sorts that shows both a Russian submarine and and American submarine meeting their fates in the frigid waters of the Berants Sea. It's suggested that there may be a third submarine that took out both of the first
two, but elements of the destruction are left up in the air (or down in the water, as the case may be). One way or the other, when the American sub, which had been shadowing the Russian sub, loses contact with military types back stateside, it of course
kicks off an immediate search. Because Hunter Killer sticks pretty vigorously to Syd Field screenwriting techniques, there's only one submarine close enough to the carnage to go investigate, the USS Arkansas, which has just had a new,
untested commander appointed, one Joe Glass. The film's introduction of Glass is one of those patently ridiculous vignettes meant to telescope everything noble about the character into one moment, in this case his hunting decision not to take out a buck
(with a bow and arrow, no less) after he sees a doe and fawn following behind.
What's perhaps most interesting about Hunter Killer is how it seems to be developing pretty resolutely on (as Butler terms it) "submarine genre" lines, only to then kind of dart off into a topside subplot involving an attempted coup in Russia. That
element has a whole secondary group of American heroes, a SEAL team headed by a character named Bill Beaman (Toby Stephens), that infiltrates enemy territory to hopefully help figure out what's going on (one might be tempted to say "what's going on behind
the Iron Curtain" had this film been set in the Soviet Era). Meanwhile (there's a ton of "meanwhile" in this film), Glass and his team get to the devastating site of the American sub that met its fate in the film's opening scenes, whereupon they
hear a tapping sound coming from the remains of the Russian submarine that met its fate in the opening scenes. That leads to the submarine version that is at least somewhat like a conceit utilized decades ago in Airport 1975, with the
Arkansas establishing a "connection" to the ruins of the Russian craft, and ultimately rescuing some crew members, including Captain Andropov.
Along with the sub angle and the SEAL angle, there's a third set of characters in this arguably overstuffed and too fragmented feeling enterprise, all the folks back at the Pentagon. It's refreshing in a way to see Gary Oldman as a good guy for a
change, but his Admiral Charles Donnegan character is a place holder at best, with little in the writing that Oldman can sink his teeth into. This particular locale also houses Rear Admiral John Fisk (Common) and an NSA analyst named Jayne Norquist (Linda
Cardenelli). Also, perhaps a bit humorously for those who may wonder about the long gestational period this film evidently underwent, there's a female President (Caroline Goodall) who seems awfully similar to the candidate who lost in 2016.
While there's no denying that each of the strands of this tale are interwoven with each other, Hunter Killer has a curiously "ping ponging" ambience where things never really build to a major head, despite a prevalence of well executed scenes
involving a fair degree of tension, and what amounts to a coup against the coup by Russians (again, these are the bad guys?) late in the film. There's virtually no emotional attachment offered to any of these characters, meaning the "salute" to honorable
behavior late in the film between the two would be nemeses (i.e., Glass and Andropov) seems artificial and almost surprisingly uninvolving.
Hunter Killer has a decent enough premise, even if large swaths of this film seem like retreads from earlier (and arguably better) films. Butler is stolid enough, and it's certainly a pleasure to see the late Nykvist in one of his last roles, but
the film never really attains much momentum, despite some nicely staged action sequences. Fans of the cast may well want to check this out, and for those folks or anyone considering a purchase, the good news is that technical merits are first rate.
[CSW] -3.5- If you can believe the narrative of the movie concerning the coup, you may enjoy the film. The action was there. The editing was pretty good. However, it was hokum in spots. For example, individuals that you thought were shot and dumped in the
water appear later with machine guns rescuing the Russian president. If you are looking to see Gerald Butler in action scenes, you will be disappointed. Nevertheless, I thought it was a good pop corn movie.
[V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box motion codes were available at the time of this rental although they are available now.
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