Re-Boot
U-571 brings back the submarine movie with a vengeance.
Why
aren't there more submarine movies? It seems like a no-brainer formula for
success: claustrophobic setting, invisible enemy whose approach must be
estimated, inherent threat of both drowning and depth pressure, and from a
budgetary standpoint, one key set is really all that's needed. There's even a
solid track record to draw on: With a few minor exceptions (anyone remember
Kelsey Grammer in Down Periscope? didn't think so), submarine movies
from the big studios have been solid entertainment at the very least, whether
big and blustery (Crimson Tide), intricately plotted (The Hunt for
Red October), or even transposed to a sci-fi setting (Star Trek II: The
Wrath of Khan). And then there's always the classic by which all are
measured: Wolfgang Petersen's Das Boot, a film that's loaded with
action, suspense, human drama, and a solid antiwar message. Perhaps that's part
of the problem, though; who wants to rise to the challenge of making a movie
that'll automatically be measured against such giants? Answer: Jonathan Mostow,
writer and director of the recent Kurt Russell actioner Breakdown. Give
the guy credit for having the balls to try to make a Das Boot of his own. Then give him a hand: U-571 is not bad at
all.
Comparisons to Petersen's epic
are inevitable from the get-go. The setting is World War II. We open onboard a
German U-boat captained by a bearded fellow who looks not unlike Jurgen
Prochnow. For a good 10 minutes or so, the only on-screen dialogue is German
with English subtitles, as this Nazi submarine comes under attack. To ensure
that we don't sympathize too much with the enemy, however, there's an
obligatory "let's slaughter some civilians" scene before the sub is
left dead in the water, awaiting aid that may never come.
Focus now on the good guys. The
dialogue here is in English, but comparisons to Das Boot don't end, as
we meet our heroes at a party during shore leave, same as in Petersen's film.
The key internal conflict is quickly and broadly sketched: Second-in-command
Tyler (Matthew McConaughey) wants to be a captain, but his commanding officer
Dahlgren (Bill Paxton) refuses to recommend him for promotion, as he doesn't
believe Tyler has what it takes to send a crewman to his death if need be.
(Guess what'll happen before the movie's over?) Soon,
shore leave is canceled, the men are standing outside on the docks in the rain
as welders touch up the submarine (a standard scene in these kinds of movies,
but almost always impressive nonetheless), and Tyler is being briefed on the
nature of the mission: Rendezvous with the crippled German sub while
masquerading as a supply ship, maintain the charade long enough to get onboard
and steal an Enigma machine (a top-secret encoding device vaguely resembling a
typewriter), then get it back without allowing the enemy to know that it's been
taken. (The story is an amalgam of several real events, as the end titles make
clear; the capture of a similar device really was one of the major turning
points of the war.)
Well, we've seen enough movies
to know that the best-laid plans of military men seldom work out smoothly. Sure
enough, the real German relief sub arrives sooner than expected and blows the
American vessel all to hell. It is at this point that U-571 clearly
comes into its own: With captain Dahlgren out of
commission,
U-571 has significantly improved upon Das
Boot in the one area where the latter was vulnerable: special effects. Even
the recently restored, digitally enhanced director's cut is no match for
Universal's in-your-face onslaught. Hear the breakers crash against the hull!
See the submarine painstakingly navigate through a sea of slowly falling depth
charges! Feel the craft submerge, augmented with exterior POV shots and loud
bubbles popping in your face! There is one fake-looking CGI explosion that
could've used a few weeks' more work, but other than that, you will feel like
you're in the midst of battle.
As for the acting, it's seldom
less than adequate. Save for McConaughey and Keitel, most of the name actors
are killed off early on, leaving us with a bunch of fresh-faced newcomers; an
effect that adds to the realism of the piece, but makes it difficult to latch
on to anybody, since their faces seem similar and their characters aren't
clearly distinguished. However, if you're worried by the fact that Jon Bon
Jovi's name appears on the poster, don't be. By the time you figure out it's
him, he's already dead.
It's McConaughey's movie to
carry, and while he may seem lightweight at first, he rises to the challenge,
taking Tyler from "trademarked McConaughey pretty boy" (A Time to
Kill) all the way up to the edge of "trademarked McConaughey bug-eyed
psycho" (Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation). It has been
remarked upon before, but McConaughey really is like a more leading-man-ready
version of Woody Harrelson. The fact that his performance here is never played
for laughs is a testament to that fact. Keitel doesn't look quite right in his
role, but after a while that doesn't matter much. He's Harvey Keitel, after
all.
Mostow's direction throughout is
solid, and he proves very adept at creating tension. He only falters a little
during the scene in which the Americans first take control of the German
submarine. Combine the fast editing with a whole bunch of men wearing more or less
the same thing in the driving rain, plus the presence of a cast of mainly
generic faces, and it adds up to a whole mess of confusion. Maybe that was the
intent, but it would be more satisfying to be able to follow the characters
through the conflict with greater ease. One character appeared to be shot and
killed on three different occasions, only to show up without wounds afterward.
Eliminating the driving rain might have clarified things. It's dramatic
and all that, but leave the climactic downpours to Tony Scott next time.