DIRECTOR
John Badham
SCREENWRITERS
Robert Getchell
Alexandra Seros
based
on a screenplay by
Luc Besson
PRODUCER
Art Linson
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Michael W. Watkins
MUSIC
Hans Zimmer
EDITOR
Frank Morriss
CAST
Bridget Fonda (Maggie)
Gabriel Byrne (Bob)
Dermot Mulroney (J.P.)
Miguel Ferrer (Kaufman)
Anne Bancroft (Amanda)
Olivia d'Abo (Angela)
Richard Romanus (Fahd Bahktiar)
Harvey Keitel (Victor the Cleaner)
Lorraine Toussaint (Beth)
Geoffrey Lewis (Drugstore Owner)
Michael Rapaport (Big Stan)
MPAA rating: R
Running
time: 109m
U.S. release: March 19, 1993
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Other John
Badham films
reviewed on this site:
- Nick
of Time
|
Those
who saw La Femme Nikita, a French-Italian thriller released
here in 1991, may have been impressed by how well it duplicated
junky American thrillers. It had strong visuals, a pseudo-complex
theme of individual freedom, and lots of people dying in bloody
slow motion. Point of No Return, the new remake of Nikita,
is a duplication of a duplication: Hollywood, in its infinite
wisdom, figures it can make better American pulp than the French
can. As it turns out, Hollywood is right.
Adapted by Robert Getchell and Alexandra Seros, and solidly directed
by John Badham (The Hard Way), Point of No Return
doesn't skimp on the slow-mo carnage. Badham, a gifted director
with a keen sense of momentum, hasn't done much of note since
the extraordinarily exciting WarGames in 1983. He's in
his element here. A shoot-out at the beginning manages some hallucinatory
terror, even though you've seen a thousand variations on it;
another gunfight, in a crowded restaurant kitchen, couldn't be
staged more effectively. Badham also knows how to handle the
quieter scenes, which Nikita's director (Luc Besson) didn't,
particularly. A round of applause, then, for the return of a
good director long presumed dead.
The original Nikita (played by Anne Parillaud) has been replaced
by Maggie (Bridget Fonda), a pathetic, strung-out street punk
who kills a cop in cold blood and is captured. In the police
station, Maggie sticks a pencil through an officer's hand; later,
when hearing her sentence (death by lethal injection), she tries
to punch and kick her way out of the courtroom. All of this has
not gone unnoticed by Bob (Gabriel Byrne), a government operative.
Admiring Maggie's spirit, Bob saves her from execution and offers
her another life: She can go on killing -- for the government.
She must undergo intensive training, diction lessons, a complete
beauty makeover. The alternative? A nice coffin. Maggie accepts.
Whatever you thought of Nikita (I didn't dislike it),
it had an intriguing Pygmalion angle on the familiar assassin
theme; its setting, however, made it seem vaguely futuristic,
as if the corrupt, murderous French government it depicted were
a paranoid sci-fi fantasy. Point of No Return, set in
America, is much more believable: Who would scoff at the idea
of the United States turning sociopathic killers into salaried
sociopathic killers? Most of us are entirely eager to buy into
everything the movie shows us, including the in-house charm school
where assassions learn table manners -- the better to get into
fancy restaurants and whack the VIPs dining there.
When the government relocates Maggie to Venice, California, she
finds herself falling in love with J.P. (Dermot Mulroney), an
amiable photographer who lives in her apartment building. For
the film to work, J.P. must never discover what Maggie does;
thus, J.P. is the biggest dunce in recent movies. In a near-hilarious
scene (it was funny in Nikita, also), government agent
Bob visits Maggie and J.P., posing as her "Uncle Bob,"
and invents a touching story about Maggie's childhood. It's total
transparent bullshit, but J.P. swallows it without blinking.
Later, in a New Orleans hotel, J.P. almost catches Maggie in
the bathroom trying to pick off a woman in the Mardi Gras parade;
Maggie foils him by hiding her huge rifle in the sudsy bathtub.
Smooth.
Maggie, of course, has grown to hate her job; she wants a life
that doesn't involve explosives. Her transformation into a human
being with a conscience doesn't come off as dippy, thanks largely
to Bridget Fonda's performance. Her Maggie has an awful weight
in her stomach; she's like a seasoned alley cat who yearns for
the warm safety of a house cat, but domestication still sticks
in her craw. Towards the climax, we see the monster Maggie might
become: "The Cleaner" (Harvey Keitel), a comically
deadpan assassin who butchers innocents as blandly as a Terminator
would. But wouldn't Maggie's life with J.P. -- an acceptance
of a conventional woman's role -- make her just as robotic? Whatever
her decision, she won't be her own woman. Fonda's is a classic
trapped performance, pulled this way and that by baffling emotions.
Point of No Return is no more than well-crafted exploitation,
but Fonda convinces us that Maggie's identity crisis is worth
at least a passing thought. |