Date: Fri 11-Apr-1997
Date: Fri 11-Apr-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Illustration: C
Location: A12
Quick Words:
Playing-Kilmer-Saint-Shue
Full Text:
(rev "The Saint" for Now Playing, 4/18/97)
Now Playing-
Kilmer Is A Saint That Sinks
By Trey Paul Alexander III
Val Kilmer flashes his pearly whites, rolls enough accents off his tongue to
make his dialogue coach proud, and casts smoldering glances from the screen in
the new motion picture release, The Saint , playing at the Cine in Danbury.
Whereas the versatile Kilmer was perhaps overwhelmed by the immense visual,
stylistic machinery of the Batman franchise in his lone outing as the caped
crusader in Batman Forever , here he is the one washing away everything in his
path.
As Simon Templar, gentleman thief and master of disguise, Kilmer gets to don
countless wigs and varying verbal inflections, from a paunchy, balding English
scholar to a raven-haired Spaniard, to a German artist with flowing tresses.
However, in this reworking of the venerable Templar character, created by
Leslie Charteris in the 1930s and played by numerous actors including a
pre-Bond Roger Moore in the `60s TV series, there is scant enough narrative
machinery to balance out Kilmer's eccentric chowing down of the scenery.
The plot involves a maverick Russian politico (Rade Serbedzija) seeking to
gain authority in his native country. His key to restoring strength to the
motherland is gaining the formula for cold fusion, a breakthrough discovery
for the generation of power. Dr Emma Russell (Elisabeth Shue), the scientist
behind this innovation, therefore becomes his chief target, and he hires
Templar, a sly burglar who once bested him and his defenses, to procure her
notes. But this man of a thousand faces (yet nary a single character trait)
finds himself falling hard for Russell and must decide whether to follow his
expanding Swiss bank account or his feelings.
Paired with Shue, who tosses every stereotype about nerdy scientists out the
window as a head-turning physicist, Kilmer and his co-star run roughshod over
this movie; they make a smashing couple and appear to be having a good time.
However, they're the only ones enjoying themselves. Though the eyes will not
weary of watching them, The Saint grows quickly tiresome because it invests so
little in the development of its characters or, for that matter, an engaging
plot.
Going into the film, all signs looked positive. Kilmer, fresh from being let
out of the Batman movies, had something to prove. (Is he popular enough to
carry his own series?) Shue, hot off an unprecedented Oscar nomination for
Leaving Las Vegas , wanted to confirm that she merits to be counted as a
legitimate leading lady. Director Phillip Noyce was coming off two successful
Tom Clancy adaptations ( Patriot Games and Clear and Present Danger ) starring
Harrison Ford. So, what went wrong?
The strength of Noyce's Clancy celluloid versions (besides having Ford as his
leading man) was his attention to detail and the methodical untangling of a
story. Each film boasted the strength of complex, well-plotted narratives that
were punctuated (though not defined) by taut, craftsman-like action sequences.
Yet The Saint lacks any connective tissue for its narrative. It just strings
together a bunch of moments set in such picturesque locales as Moscow and
Oxford, and though the settings are luxurious, the moments themselves are
lackluster.
Also, surprisingly, Noyce provides his film with little punch. Basically, it
consists of endless chase scenes in which Templar and Russell run from the bad
guys: no memorable escape scenes, no eye-popping action sequences, and the
added handicap of uncharismatic villains.
The Saint , rated PG-13 for mild violence, profanity and suggestiveness, is
not a case of talented people slumming their way through a movie. It's Exhibit
A of the charmless madness that occurs when there is no discernible method to
a movie's narrative reasoning.
