Perfect Storm, The [Warner Brothers]

HD DVD - APPROX. 130 MINS. - 2000 - US Rating: PG-13
George Clooney as Captain Billy Tyne
You want a storm? You get a storm. And you want a storm in the clarity of high definition? With the HD-DVD you get that, too.
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HD DVD REVIEW
By John J. Puccio
FIRST PUBLISHED Jun 4, 2006

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"Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, every where,
Nor any drop to drink."

--Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner"

It may not be a perfect movie, but "The Perfect Storm" is a perfect title. The movie is all about water and storms. In fact, it's practically all water and storms. By the time you're finished, you may be as waterlogged as the actors. But you can't say the movie doesn't deliver the goods as advertised, at least in its second half. You want a storm? You get a storm. And you want a storm in the clarity of high definition? With the HD-DVD you get that, too.

The story is based on a true incident from 1991 involving a Gloucester, Massachusetts, fishing boat, the Andrea Gail, and the biggest storm in recorded history. The trouble with the screen adaptation of Sebastian Junger's book about the event, however, is that director Wolfgang Petersen ("Das Boot," "In the Line of Fire," "Air Force One," "Troy") has turned what might have been a riveting ninety-minute action yarn into an overlong, two-hour-plus melodrama. Not that audiences seemed to mind. The movie was one of the biggest moneymaking hits of the summer of 2000.

Because the filmmakers felt they needed to do more than just show a boat in a storm, they attempted to develop the personalities of the Andrea Gail's crew. The hope was that if we cared enough about them, the subsequent dangers they faced would be all the more suspenseful and harrowing. Unfortunately, the character development is shallow, creating people more akin to soap-opera denizens than high-seas adventurers.

Capt. Billy Tyne (George Clooney) gets the lead as skipper of the boat. Like Hemingway's protagonist in "The Old Man and the Sea," Tyne is a great fisherman now down on his luck and eager to prove his worth. For good measure, we're informed that he is divorced and has two kids he longs for. Clooney is earnest and stalwart in his portrayal. In Tyne's crew we find the expected character types. There's Bobby Shatford (Mark Wahlberg), a young man in love with a beautiful and devoted lady, Christina Cotter (Diane Lane). The first time we meet them, he's returning from a fishing trip and she jumps, literally, into his arms. You'd think he'd been away for years, as in the whaling days of the nineteenth century. The opposite of Bobby is Bugsy (John Hawkes), a kind of loner and outcast of love, who at last meets someone who seems to care for him just before the fateful voyage. Dale "Murph" Murphy (John C. Reilly) is a man divorced from his wife because of his love for the sea. David "Sully" Sullivan (William Fichtner) is a seeming tough guy the captain asks to come aboard at the last minute, who immediately engages Murph in a feud. And Alfred Pierre (Allen Payne) is a fellow apparently from Jamaica and along for the ride. The least is made of him; I guess his color is supposed to say enough.

Of peripheral interest is Linda Greenlaw (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio), a fellow fishing-boat captain and Tyne's good friend; and Bob Brown (Michael Ironside in one of his patented tough-guy roles), the hard-assed owner of the Andrea Gail, who expects big hauls on every outing. Each of these men and women is given a moment in the spotlight to generate some sympathy later on, but the first thirty or forty minutes of the film come off as largely tedious, awkward, and maudlin.

Finally, the boat sets out to sea, and things come around. Several preliminaries take place before the big storm, though, as if to warm us up. There's a shark attack on one of the fishermen, followed by a man overboard and a heroic rescue. It's fairly routine excitement and seems unnecessary to the film's central narrative. Clooney portrays Capt. Tyne as something of fanatic, a sort of Capt. Ahab of the sailfish set. He takes the boat farther and farther out to find the big catch. And fish they get. Plus a lot more than they bargained for. To get back to port they have to sail straight through the middle of the "storm of the century," the worst convergence of storms in the history of the world!

The storm sequences are what we pay our money for, and they assuredly pay off. For forty-five minutes, the action never stops, and it is awesome in the extreme. Computer graphics integrate seamlessly with live-action footage to create some intensely thrilling scenes. But this isn't enough. Interwoven with the dilemma of the Andrea Gail are the plights of a distressed sailboat and a downed rescue helicopter. I'm not sure these subplots add a lot to the main story; perhaps they're meant to relieve the tension of the Andrea Gail's situation by taking our mind momentarily off Capt. Tyne and his crew. The only thing that really concerned me about these incidents is that one of them, the sailboat episode, wastes the talents of one of my favorite actresses, Karen Allen, in a part that allows her to utter maybe two words and then look worried and frazzled.

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