Shared Darkness
A Communal Life in Film and DVD, Examined

The Guardian

Print the article

This entry was posted on 1/20/2007 10:02 AM and is filed under DVD Reviews.




A square-jawed, water-set tale of tutelage and trumped personal adversity that takes place against the backdrop of a variety of rescues in dangerously stormy weather, Kevin Costner and Ashton Kutcher’s The Guardian is a sincere and capably executed film, if ultimately also a dispensable one.

Despite copious exclamations of “Hoo-rah!” and the like, the sort of machismo on display in The Guardian is fairly tame, and the movie isn’t an overt and specific portrait of American military culture in the vein of last year’s Annapolis. Set in Alaska, the story centers around the mentor-protégé relationship between a veteran Coast Guard Rescue Swimmer and one of his young charges. Ben Randall (Costner) is legendary amongst his peers, but after a terrible accident claims his crew, he’s haunted by the memory. His commander temporarily reassigns him to an instructional post, where we meet Jake Fischer (Kutcher), an ex-high school swim champion who has spurned a variety of college scholarship offers to give the Coast Guard's "A" School for Rescue Divers a crack. The elite program has a washout rate of more than 50 percent, but Jake readily distinguishes himself, even if his focus on training records makes Ben uncertain that he’s there for the right reasons — to save lives.

While its rescue sequences are credibly handled, the movie lacks the gigantic scope and additional nonfiction heft of Wolfgang Petersen’s The Perfect Storm. What director Andrew Davis’ The Guardian has in abundant earnestness, it also matches in recycled conventions, as various military pic genre touchstones — tortured flashbacks and nightmares, unconventional training methodologies, inter-branch antagonism, romance with a townie — all receive hearty workout over the course of 139 minutes.

A good half hour or more could easily have been cleaved off of The Guardian were it not for the picture’s dutiful insistence to hit all the beats of synthetic conflict, from Ben’s crumbling marriage, a casualty of workaholic neglect, to an arbitrary second act detour in a confrontational Navy bar. A love story between Jake and local schoolteacher Emily Thomas (Melissa Sagemiller), while bringing a wisp of early levity to the proceedings, is also a non-starter.

Ironically, too, it’s this persistence in attempting to give Ben and Jake lives outside of work that robs the movie of a chance to get to know any of its other characters beyond purely the functions they serve in the story. Ron L. Brinkerhoff’s script is a fine model of structure, but offers little in the way of interpersonal insightfulness, and its rescue finale is a somewhat credibility-stretching combination of all tests rolled into one. A late play at mythic significance also misfires.

Costner, unlike some aging semi-contemporaries, seems quite at ease sliding into grizzled mentor-type roles, and he already has such a pleasantly well-worn demeanor suited to these roles that you glimpse, even in something as predictable as The Guardian, a successful future in substantive movies about aging, busted romances and reconciliation.

Kutcher, meanwhile, showed in A Lot Like Love that he could subjugate his sitcom instincts and play the “normal,” orbiting body to a more colorful or outrageous character, at least in a comedic/romantic context. In the role of apprentice here, however, he’s less successful. Part of this is a function of how the character of Jake is written — vaguely haunted by a secret we know will eventually come out, but not truly obstinate enough to create substantial friction with Ben — but his performance is also uneven, hampered early on by indistinct, wide-eyed stares.

The Guardian is housed in a regular Amray plastic case with snap-shut hinges, which in turn slides into a glossy cardboard slipcover. The movie is presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen, enhanced for 16x9 televisions, and comes with complementary Dolby digital 5.1 surround sound audio tracks in English, French and Spanish. Supplemental bonus materials kick off with a genial, two-handed feature-length audio commentary track from Davis and Brinkerhoff in which the pair discuss paring to the script, plus location and production detail. You get the sense that theirs was a close collaboration, particularly when Brinkerhoff talks about being the only writer on the project, and his enjoyment at seeing the movie through completion.

An 11-minute making-of featurette delves further into elements of the movie’s partial Louisiana shoot and water tank work, and is replete with enough choice talking head interview bits to give an overview that feels substantially longer. A second featurette, clocking in at five and a half minutes, focuses on the real-life Coast Guard, a bit of its history, and the fine job they do of rescuing those in distress. Finally, excised material also gets a workout in the form of seven minutes of deleted scenes — including a further fleshing out of Jake and Emily’s relationship — as well as a much more “Hollywood” (and thankfully unused) alternate ending, all with additional commentary from Davis and Brinkerhoff. A small collection of preview trailers round things out. C+ (Movie) B (Disc)

 del.icio.us  Stumbleupon  Technorati  Digg 

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
Trackback specific URL for this entry
  • No trackbacks exist for this entry.
Comments
    • No comments exist for this entry.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments will be subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Enter the above security code (required)

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.