Movie Reviews for Eagle Eye

Eagle Eye

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Movie Reviews of Eagle Eye

Movie Review: AWESOME
Summary: 5 Stars

CREEPY to think a computer could have that much control over people.
Great suspense movie.

Movie Review: Pleased
Summary: 5 Stars

The movie is great and I received it expeditiously. I am pleased with my purchase.

Movie Review: Eagle Eye
Summary: 5 Stars

This had me on the edge of my seat from start to finish! Awesome movie!

Movie Review: Shia, dude, you shoulda just let that call go to voice mail...
Summary: 4 Stars

The Bourne Ultimatum (Widescreen Edition) and Minority Report (Widescreen Edition) both produced similar moments which I really dug, in which a near omniscient character guides his/her fleeing companion and does so with such exquisite timing and pinpoint accuracy that capture is thereby avoided (Jason Bourne in one film, that psychic chick in the other). EAGLE EYE is one extended version of these two moments, and, guess what, it doesn't get old.

I guess this could happen, government voyeurism, what with how advanced technology's gotten. In fact, I've no doubt this is happening right now. EAGLE EYE presents a twisty plot, the soup of which blends Big Brother paranoia, the techno thriller, the shadow of terrorism, a whiff of Skynet, and the classic man on the run theme. EAGLE EYE tells of two strangers - Jerry Shaw, the slacker copy boy (excuse me, "copy associate") from Copy Cabana and Rachel, the stressed single mom/paralegal - suddenly flung together by a mysterious (and dang pushy) female who gives them brisk instructions over their cell phones, forcing them to frenetically run and jump around, drive like they've got to use the bathroom, hold up a pair of security guards for a briefcase (of which contents are a letdown, by the way), and even sneak onboard a military cargo plane. And those are just for starters...

The most intriguing part of the film, for me, was learning what was up with the voicy voice, who's cornered Jerry by framing him as a terrorist and cornered Rachel by threatening to kill her son. Much of the suspense leaks out once the film drops the 411 on the cell phone taskmaster. EAGLE EYE is escapist cinema which may have started out intending to make some sort of significant political and social statement but then kind of shrugged it off halfway thru the film. There's no dearth of far-fetched moments (like, on the train, where there just happened to be a conveniently snoozing stranger with a celly sitting right across from Shia or Rachel being so out-of-the-blue capable with a firearm). But the third act really goes ape-shiznit with the preposterous as the Big Bad's plans coalesce and imperil the nation's highest offices. The film's big crescendo echoes the climax scene from Hitchcock's The Man Who Knew Too Much.

Will Smith's ENEMY OF THE STATE and the Bourne series have already demonstrated that the government can check up on us by accessing security, surveillance, and traffic cameras, as well as cell phones. EAGLE EYE one-ups these films by featuring an antagonist who is more far reaching, more omnipresent. The voice not only can track any person anytime, anywhere, by tapping into the nation's electronic data grid, but she can remotely control stop lights, steer elevated trains, set off power lines, and even take over military aircrafts. When our heroes go on the run (and don't really have time to chat on the cell), they get helpful directions from various electronic billboard signs, readout displays and monitor screens. So, unless you're Amish, there's no escaping the nagging voice.

Shia LaBeouf lost some cred with me for his vine-swinging part in the latest Indiana Jones flick. Here, he's decent but this really isn't a platform to show off his acting chops, slave as the picture is to the quick cut edits, flashy stunts and loud pyrotechnics. LaBeouf's characer has a few moments to do his surly, angst-ridden bit (what with his dead twin brother being the brighter light in the family), but he and lead actress Michelle Monaghan actually come off more as chess pieces being shuffled about by the all powerful entity to progress its murky end game. Julianne Moore plays the mysterious voice on the phone, managing to sound impersonal yet officiously sexy. Billy Bob Thornton is good as the undeterred FBI guy and Rosario Dawson is wasted as Air Force OSI Agent Zoey Perez trying to piece it all together. Thornton, by the way, comes up with the best line in the film, as he chews out his underlings: "If I don't get some good leads soon, you're all gonna be demoted into something that's gonna require touching $#!t with your hands!"

So, why am I four-starring this film? Because, in spite of the over-the-top beats, I got hooked into the premise enough that I had to see it thru to the end. And it may be loud and sometimes incoherent, but, damn if I didn't enjoy the wild ride. I think the key is that the film moves at such a frenetic pace that it forces you to shift your focus from one sequence to the next. You might just have enough time to ponder the implausibility of whatever's on the screen, but then you almost immediately get distracted with the next implausible thing on the screen. It's sleight-of-hand trickeration, is what it is. And, in the final tally, I had a good time (and, yes, part of the good time was spent making fun of the film).

As for the government accessing our electronic devices, that would certainly explain why I'm so sucky at Tetris on my cell phone. Now I see that it's the government conducting cyber terrorism. Those finks.

Movie Review: Fun, Mindless Action
Summary: 4 Stars

Eagle Eye / B001L57ZYM

*Spoilers*

"Eagle Eye" isn't likely to win any major awards for a deep, compelling story or emotionally moving acting, but as a Friday night mindless fun action movie, it's everything that it should be.

When two perfectly dull and normal people receive a mysterious phone call telling them they have been "activated" as sleeper terrorists that they didn't even know they were supposed to be, they react with realistic shock, confusion, and refusal to act. Shia's character reacts particularly realistically, certain that his chances are better with the FBI agents who have taken him into custody and only fleeing when the alternative is to be shot and killed. Equally realistically, both of the "activated" people react with hostility and suspicion towards the other, convinced that the other may not be as innocent as they know that they themselves are.

The plot unfolds quickly and manically, with just enough "catch up" explanations to keep the viewer in the loop (and plenty of "Oh, THAT's why..." moments) without ever devolving into a derailing exposition monologue. The 'good guys' catch on to the real story much faster than in your average "everyone must be dumb to facilitate the plot" story and the villain behind the mysterious phone calls has a nice, if slightly predictable twist. All the acting is done surprisingly well, which is just that much more proof that an action movie doesn't require a bunch of big name actors to be decent. And I was particularly pleased that while the movie did finally succumb to the mandatory "we have to fall in love now" nonsense that every action/adventure movie seems to adhere to, the love interest material was kept to a severe minimum and left until the very end of the movie - a nice choice, in my opinion.

"Eagle Eye" isn't perfect, but the flaws it suffers from are the usual action-movie flaws that can't really be avoided. The super-computer shouldn't be able to tap remotely into so many devices, and I'm pretty sure that you can't remotely blow up power wires on the power grid (why would you program in that particular little ability?). Why is the experimental medicine locked in a time-case (designed to look like a bomb timer) and carried by a security detail, but the government's new powerful explosive is being sent by regular USPS? Why does the super-computer wait until everything goes wrong before attempting a back-up? And there's really no reason other than tragic suspense to have the little boy's trumpet be the trigger for the bomb - if there are speakers in that building, the computer should be able to remotely generate the necessary sound to trigger the explosives. I tried to come up with a "first law" reason for why this wasn't done, but considering how often the super-computer directly kills people, that explanation just doesn't seem to work.

I don't know if this movie deserves accolades when compared to every movie ever made, but "Eagle Eye" was definitely the most fun action movie I've seen this year and I'm grateful for that.

~ Ana Mardoll
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