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Collateral Damage

Collateral Damage Poster
Year: 2002
Country: USA
Genre(s): Action, Thriller
   
Directed by: Andrew Davis
Producer: Lowell D. Blank, Mitchell E. Dauterive, David Foster, Hawk Koch, Nicholas Meyer, Steven Reuther, John Schimmel, Teresa Tucker-Davies
   
Screenplay: David Griffiths, Peter Griffiths
Cameraman: Adam Greenberg
Composer: Graeme Revell
Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger (as Gordy Brewer), Francesca Neri (as Selena Perrini), Elias Koteas (as Peter Brandt), Cliff Curtis (as Claudio Perrini), John...
   
Runtime: 108 min
MPAA Rating: R
In Theaters: February 8, 2002
Distribution: WARNER BROS.
Production: Bel Air Entertainment, David Foster Productions, Hacienda Productions, Warner Bros. Pictures
   
Rated 10.0 (1 clicks)
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Collateral Damage
« The Act Itself Wasn't Personal...HIS VENGEANCE WILL BE »

The tagline for Collateral Damage, the new Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle about seeking revenge against a terrorist, is "What would you do if you lost everything?" which is pretty damn funny considering ol' Arnie is clinging embarrassingly to a career in action flicks despite not appearing in anything worth the price of admission in about eight years. He's as cinematically relevant as Sly Stallone, and, frankly, the only reason Hollywood hasn't put him down yet is because of Terminator 3: The Rise of the Machines (well, that and a very real fear that Maria Shriver will swoop down and drain the blood from their collective necks).

In Damage, Arnie (The Sixth Day) plays L.A. firefighter Gordon Brewer, a happily married father who watches his wife (Lindsay Frost) and young son (Ethan Dampf) get cut to ribbons when a terrorist detonates a bomb at the Colombian consulate office that happens to be next-door to an outdoor café at which they were eating. At first, Gordon feels guilty because he was late picking them up, but the remorse quickly turns to a searing rage when he discovers the government (those pricks!) aren't going to do anything about catching the man responsible for the devastation, despite knowing the bomber's identity (he's called "the Wolf" and is played by Training Day's Cliff Curtis). Fifteen minutes later, contrary to everyone's advice, Gordon is in Colombia with the sole purpose of killing the Wolf and anyone else who gets in his way. And can I just say how amusing (and unintentionally so) it is to see this giant white man trying to communicate with little brown people? I can barely understand this guy; how is a Colombian going to figure out what he's saying?

Anyway, Gordon is constantly on the run from rebels, stopping occasionally to meet a zany character or two (Johns Turturro and Leguizamo surface briefly to liven things up) and acquire a replacement wife (Hannibal's Francesca Neri) and kid (Tyler Posey) who aid him in his mission. Historically, director Andrew Davies' work is all over the map, from hit (The Fugitive) to miss (Chain Reaction) to everything in between (A Perfect Murder).

Since his next film is Under Siege 3, however, I was actually holding out hope for Damage, which was yanked from the release schedule after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In his defense, there's probably only so much you can accomplish with a stone-faced lead actor whose only expression can be best described as "Grimace," whether his character is supposed to be horrified, angry, afraid or has just been zapped with a taser gun. Davis is even starting to revisit scenes that put him on the map, like when he makes Arnie leap off that giant waterfall.

At the end of Damage – and I hope I'm not ruining the finale for any of you knuckle-draggers out there – there wasn't a big cheer when Gordon finally offed the Wolf, like you might expect in this post-9/11 world (maybe it's because Damage wasn't fortunate enough to work in the patriotism angle). The audience did seem glad, though. Glad it was over. As has been widely reported, the Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle, "Collateral Damage," was the biggest cinema casualty following the events of September 11. Originally scheduled to be released the same month, it was promptly yanked from the September lineup due to its terrorism storyline.

Finally being released, the film undeniably does evoke the tragedy that befell the nation five months ago, which wouldn't necessarily be a negative thing were the picture not so preposterous and exploitative. Los Angeles firefighter Gordon Brewer (Arnold Schwarzenegger) couldn't be happier. He values his profession, has a warm relationship with his wife (Lindsay Frost), and a precocious young son. His entire world changes in an instant when he witnesses his family killed in a ruthless act of terrorism, and later discovers that he was the only one that saw the face of the man responsible for it just seconds before it happened.

The Colombian-based terrorist is nicknamed "The Wolf" (Cliff Curtis), and when the CIA fails to hunt him down, Gordon makes the journey to Colombia himself, risking his own life to avenge the nine innocent people murdered in the explosion. Directed by Andrew Davis (1993's "The Fugitive"), "Collateral Damage" is a dreary, depressing revenge drama that bypasses a thoughtful approach to its very serious subject matter in preference for one ridiculous plot development after the next. Seeing a single man travel into enemy territory to hunt down the evil terrorist who took his wife and child from him is maddening, even for a movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger (1999's "End of Days"). The film, despite a few token action sequences, goes past the point of fantasy to a plain where director Davis and screenwriters David Griffiths and Peter Griffiths not only hold their audience in contempt, but talk down to them. It isn't fun being jerked around for the sake of a mindless two hours when the material deserves a more fair treatment.

Following a mildly arresting first 30 minutes where Gordon deals with his awful loss, few mentions are ever made again about his family, as "Collateral Damage" tries to have its cake and eat it too. The middle section, concerning Gordon's experiences in Colombia, is plodding, at best. Very little of interest occurs (save for a tremendous drop down a set of waterfalls), as it only serves as a means to reaching its action-packed climax (set in Washington, D.C.). The finale regains some of the momentum of the first act, but it is all in exchange for an unforgiving twist in which a key character goes against everything we have previously learned about them and switches sides. No attempt is made to deal with the moral implications that arise from this idiotic plot turn, making it all the more off-putting. Except for Schwarzenegger, in another typically unextraordinary performance, the cast is outrageously wasted.

Francesca Neri (2001's "Hannibal") has a couple competent scenes as Selina, the long-suffering wife of "The Wolf" who decides to help a captured Gordon escape, but the character isn't treated with the respect she should have been. As for Elias Koteas (2001's "Novocaine"), as CIA agent Peter Brandt; John Turturro (2001's "The Man Who Cried"), as a Colombian cell mate Gordon meets when he is put in jail for having no passport; and John Leguizamo (2001's "Moulin Rouge"), as a drug trafficker, whatever they were initially attracted to in this project is not evident in the finished product. If Arnold Schwarzenegger wants to start making movies with more humane undercurrents, that is all well and good.

Before he does this, however, he should learn the difference between honesty and manipulation. As the end credits begin to roll on "Collateral Damage," don't be too surprised if you have already forgotten what Gordon's whole motivation was for tracking down "The Wolf" in the first place. The filmmakers certainly did.
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