Great Film: Paycheck
Good action but the gimmick is difficult to accept because it continually forces you to accept it
Michael Jennings is a reverse engineer who, in exchange for big money,
takes
items apart in order to rebuild them for other companies. After every job
his memory is wiped back to the moment he started the job. When he is
offered a massive payday to do a three-year job for friend James Rethrick
he
accepts. Next thing he knows it is three years later and the job done.
He
goes to collect his money but finds that he has waived his right to it and
replaced it with a package full of strange objects. When he is set up
with
the FBI he goes on the run and realises that the objects are all clues or
aids in his mission - a mission that he himself has arranged.
There's nothing quite like a good action movie that allows you to accept
whatever the plot is as it presents good solid action. This film almost
manages it and it is ironic that the concept from Dick is what weakens it.
The plot is a bit of a stretch but once you accept it you can move on -
like
Face/Off, once you get the idea and accept it you can enjoy the action.
However with Paycheck you are only left alone for 10 minutes before you
have
to accept the stretched plot all over again. Every time an item perfectly
fits a situation you have to accept the whole concept over again. The
problem is that the items are far too specific. With the lottery number
strip it works, however with the paperclip and the bullet it is too much
of
a stretch and took the enjoyment off the action a bit.
Happily it is only a bit. The plot as an idea works pretty well but has
been done better elsewhere (Bourne Identity and Total Recall for example)
it
is presented too full of holes that appear with the slightest picking. It
would have been much better if the items had been bigger in terms of
meaning
rather than very specific (e.g. the lighter and hairspray), bigger clues
and
so on would have been better. However the action is still pretty good,
not
quite classic Woo but full or good touches. The film has a good steady
pace
to it and it keeps it up for the majority - very quickly getting through
the
set up and jumping to three years hence. The action is enjoyably slick
and
makes good use of effects; true, some of the set ups in the scenes is
stretched, and some of the stuff about the weapons is just dumb (a fired
bullet with it's casing, a bullet being fired by a thick piece of metal
etc), however if you can accept the plot then I imagine accepting that Woo
often takes style over substance shouldn't be a problem.
The cast is so-so despite having a surprising amount of famous faces.
Affleck is better than usual; because he is quite ordinary he plays an
everyman pretty well and it is easy to see him as a `normal' guy. Eckhart
is reasonably good but he has limited screen time. It's good to see him in
big films like this as he is an interesting guy, but I hope he doesn't
just
turn off his skills. Giamatti is in the film briefly and is OK comic
relief
but Thurman has been miscast. She does most of the film pretty well but
her
early scenes as an expert biologist are laughable she is so inept! The
support cast features a really good turn from Feore as well as good roles
from Morton and the wonderful Hall - although the roles are practically
cameos.
Overall this is an enjoyable little action movie but it is ironic that the
story is both interesting and the film's weak point. The items are too
specific and, each time Jennings uses one, it forces the audience to
accept
the unlikely premise all over again. Worth seeing for enjoyable action
delivered by a director who recovers some of his form here.
Cast
- Agent Dodge played by Joe Morton
- James Rethrick played by Aaron Eckhart
- Michael Jennings played by Ben Affleck
- Agent Fuman played by Fulvio Cecere
- Dr. Rachel Porter played by Uma Thurman
- Jude, Guard played by Callum Keith Rennie
- John Wolfe played by Colm Feore







