‘The Core’ is hollow but stimulating
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A secret military weapon that causes earthquakes has undesired side
effects that have caused the Earth’s core to stop spinning. This
results in huge “natural” disasters and could mean the end of all
life. Therefore, a team of “terranauts” (Hilary Swank, Aaron Eckhart,
Delroy Lindo, Stanley Tucci, Tcheky Karyo and Bruce Greenwood) set
out to travel to the center of the Earth to jump start the core with
weapons of mass destruction.
Originally planned for release last November, the film was
retooled with additional special effects resulting in its delay.
Complicating this was the space shuttle Columbia tragedy, as
producers pondered removing a segment of the film that shows an
unexpected Los Angeles landing of the Endeavor. Jon Amiel directs
this stretch of imagination supplied by screenwriters Cooper Layne
(who is also a producer) and John Rogers. What results is a film that
lacks a coherent vision. This is evidenced by the powers that
controlled the publicity of the film. Anyone who has seen the
advertisements for this story knows that a government weapon is to
blame for the crisis in the story, yet this is not revealed to the
heroes of the film until two thirds of the way into it. The audience
might have been as surprised as the cast if the film had not been
poorly publicized. This disconnect extends into every facet of
production.
The writing is borderline cornball mixed with techno babble, while
the actors are directed in epic fashion. Eckhart and Swank shine in
scenes together, while Tucci’s character annoys. Lindo and Karyo are
effective and believable, Richard Jenkins seems like an amalgamation
of different characters as an Army General, Alfre Woodard and Bruce
Greenwood are underused, and DJ Qualls’ character is miswritten and
almost as annoying as Tucci. Part of what makes Qualls and Tucci’s
characters fatiguing is their cookie cutter stereotypes.
The special effects are where the true strengths of this film lie.
Many truly brilliant moments with only a few failures include an
emergency landing of the space shuttle, an attack sequence of “birds
gone wild,” and, of course, the journey to the center of the earth.
Unfortunately, character subplots and relationships are not
wrapped up satisfactorily and certain tweaks that could have been
made to increase the plausibility of some of the film’s events were
not made. In addition, there is no clear definition of a theme or
moral to this story even though creating one would have been fairly
simple. Despite the incredible leaps of faith one must make to
temporarily pretend to believe this film, some of the performances
and most of the effects provide enough eye candy to make this film a
worthwhile diversion.
* RAY BUFFER, 33, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
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