Often a movie come along that urges anyone who sees it to root for its success. It’s a movie you want to like. Sometimes it’s an actor, a line of dialogue, a shot. Sometimes it’s an entire cast, a screenplay or the aesthetic feel of the film. Sometimes it’s enough to win you over. Whether it’s Rupert Grint, the occasional gut busting line or the visually innovative way in which director Antoine Bardou-Jacquet challenges the idea of verisimilitude in both life and movies, something about the 2015 action-comedy “Moonwalkers” encourages you to hold on and grit your teeth through every bit of forced hedonism found in the one liners, nudity and violence.
The comedy
revolves around the idea that US mission to the moon Apollo 11 might not
succeed, and in order to keep this potential failure from the world, the CIA
has a solution: they’re going to redeploy special operative Kidman (Ron
Perlman) with the task of finding Stanley Kubrik, director of “2001: A Space
Odyssey,” to film a fake landing. Things go awry when band manager Johnny
(Rupert Grint) pretends to be Kubrick’s manager, hoping to solve his personal
money issues with the massive amounts of cash the CIA promised Kubrick. His
decision ties his fate with that of the lethal agent Kidman, and the two must
work together to pull off a production of their own moon landing.
Moonwalkers”
starts out strong, pulling you into the movie with a violent and beautiful
action sequence. The scene looks like an episode out of the Vietnam War, but
its production design comes off a little false. The vegetation’s plastic
appearance indicates a studio filmed scene, rather than one filmed on location,
but this serves only to raise the biggest question in the film: what is real?
As the scene unfolds it becomes clear that the little is real and the battle
illustrates the PTSD induced dream of Special Forces and CIA veteran Kidman. This
sort of artistic illustration remains constant in the movie, adding dimension
to an otherwise typical action comedy plot.
One of the films
biggest strengths is its actors, encumbered only by a mediocre screenplay.
Actors such as Rupert Grint have proved their merit in major films, so the
unconvincing portrayals of small moments boil down to writing.
The plot lends
itself to natural situational comedy, but instead much of the dialogue is
forced. Lines that should at least illicit a silent chuckle lack comedic timing
and come off as stilted and unnecessary. One joke doesn’t flow to another without
noticeable transition, but they instead stutter from the mouths of awkward
actors.
Like many other elements
in the movie, profanity is used gratuitously. This style shows itself
frequently in action comedies, where f-bombs are dropped more than actual
bombs, but the placement of the words seems forced. These instances of dialogue
come off like an episode of South Park, but without the cut-out animated 10
year olds, it loses much of its charm. Filmmakers veering towards the side of
more swearing than less should remember that film should aim to eliminate the
superfluous.
The sex and
drugs tend to approach excessive as well, while rock ‘n’ roll lazily comes into
play only a few times. Most shots in the film feature some sort of drug,
whether its weed, cocaine or acid, you won’t have to wait long to see one being
inhaled, snorted or ingested again. For a comedy set in the 60’s, extreme drug
use is fair game, but in the spirit of an SNL skit, “Moonwalkers” keeps the
joke going a little too long. If you aren’t high while you watch, you’ll soon wish
you had something to ease the onslaught of “funny” shroom and acid trips.
“Moonwalkers”
continues there toe-ing the line (maybe even jumping it) with the unnecessary costuming,
or rather lack thereof. Just as you won’t need to wait long to see drugs
onscreen, topless girls seem to be a hallmark of the film. While it initially seemed
to depict the wild and wanton sexual awakening in the 60’s, the intent of the
nudity appears to be to add sex appeal rather than for story development. The same goes for violence, as many time we
see Perlman’s character blast off the head of a foe, spraying gore and brain
matter everywhere. Sometimes this can be effective when used with self-awareness.
It can highlight the movies own absurdity or show the atrocity that is
violence. “Moonwalkers,” however, fails to make any real statement about the
violence, and it’s graphic nature does little to augment the movie.
The movie picks
up in the last half considerably. The moon landing scene is hilarious and
watching the characters struggle to make the flag stick on the set was one of
the most genuine laughs I’ve had in a while. If you need something to pass the
time, and can ignore the more gratuitous aspects of the film, the urge to enjoy
this nearly clever “what-if” movie may just overcome your sensibilities.
Starring: Ron Perlman, Rupert Grint, Robert Sheehan,
Eric Lampert, and Kerry Shale. Directed by Antoine Bardou-Jacquet. Screenplay
by Dean Craig. Produced by George Bermann.