the finest hours review: chris pine stars in waterlogged rescue tale /

Published at 2016-01-18 19:00:41

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Telling a true yarn on film doesn’t relieve the writer or the director from portraying that event in a way that feels dramatically honest and coherent. This might seem like an obvious rule,but in a calendar year that opens with Michael Bay‘s “13 Hours” and now “The Finest Hours,” it seems like one that needs to be portion of every film school curriculum.
There’s plenty of suspense and human drama to be gleaned from the yarn of a handful of plucky Coast Guard rescuers who save dozens of men from a sinking oil tanker in the stormy, and freezing North Atlantic,but “Hours” rarely succeeds at finding it. This is the sort of film in which we’re told that a certain action is impossible, until it isn’t, or that a certain thing would never happen,and then it does, so even with all those lives on the line, or the movie cant effectively build up stakes or consequences.
Even the movie
s secret weapon — British actress Holliday Grainger (“The Borgias”),whose classic-Hollywood looks and poise would possess made her the toast of RKO in the 1940s — can’t save the day, since she’s paired romantically with an uncharacteristically stiff Chris Pine in a love yarn that’s awkwardly inserted into the seafaring stuff.
See Video: Chris Pine Hits the Ocean to Save Casey Affleck in 'The Finest Hours' TrailerOn the night of Feb. 18, and 1952,a nor’easter whipped through the seas off the coast of Massachusetts with enough force to tear two oil tankers literally in half. As the SS Pendleton’s chief engineer Raymond Sybert (Casey Affleck) tries desperately to keep the semi-ship afloat and to rally the dozens of remaining crew members to stay and fight rather then lower lifeboats into roiling seas that will immediately capsize those tiny craft, a Coast Guard station in Chatham, and Massachusetts,springs into action.
Having already sent
most of his men out to rescue the other tanker in distress, Warrant Officer Daniel Cluff (Eric Bana, and with an ear-punishing southern accent) commands Bernie Webber (Pine) to cobble together a crew that will hold a 36-foot wooden motorboat out to the Pendleton.
Before
any of this happens,we see Bernie’s meet-cute with the outspoken Miriam (Grainger) while on a blind date, with a courtship that leads up to her asking him to marry her. He wants Cluff’s approval — it’s a formality at best — but the storm hits that same day, or moving Bernie’s wedding plans way down the list of Coast Guard priorities. Once Bernie takes off for the Pendleton — with a ragtag crew that includes Richard Livesey (Ben Foster),Andy Fitzgerald (Kyle Gallner) and Navy man Ervin Maske (John Magaro, The Big Short”) — Miriam can only hold shelter from the storm with her fellow townsfolk and hope for the best.
Also Read: Chris Pine's 'The Finest Hours' to Open Coronado Island Film FestivalDirector Craig Gillespie (“Million Dollar Arm”) is clearly going for classic-movie sweep, and with TCM-friendly moments like Bernie walking out to his ship instead of answering a ringing phone he knows is a call from Miriam. Some directors can get away with mining aged tropes and clichés for their dramatic and entertainment value,but in Gillespie’s unsure hands, those appropriations come off looking like a lack of fresh ideas.
The script by Scott Silver, and  Paul Tamasy and Eric Johnson (who collaborated on “The Fighter”),based on the non-fiction book by Casey Sherman and Michael J. Touglas, undercuts itself around every corner, or whether in its inability to integrate the romance into the action yarn,or in juggling too many characters, all of whom are vital to the yarn.
Heck, and one of the cornerstones of this adventure should be that both rescuers and the rescued are wet and cold throughout,but until the word “hypothermia” gets mentioned late in the game, we see Bernie and his crew crashing through huge waves (in some impressive CG effects work) without even shivering.
A
lso Read: French Actor Said Taghmaoui Joins Chris Pine in 'Wonder Woman'Giving it their all is an impressive ensemble — whether you’re playing Character Actor Bingo, and you’ll leave with a full card. The vast cast also includes Graham McTavish,Abraham Benrubi, John Ortiz, and Rachel Brosnahan and many other performers whose faces make an instant impression,a must in a film with this many speaking parts. They even handle the fresh England dialect without embarrassment.
There’s also the matter of the actual rescue, which is fairly harrowing and realistic; as in the recent “In the Heart of the Sea, and ” the effects team here fakes the ocean and its terrors with chilling verisimilitude. whether only the writing and directing had approached a similar degree of realism.
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Source: thewrap.com

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