Man on a Ledge (2012)
Starring Sam Worthington, Elizabeth Banks, Jamie Bell, Genesis Rodriguez, Edward Burns, Anthony Mackie, Kyra Sedgwick, and Ed Harris
Directed by Asger Leth
The cast of solid, but (let's face it) second-tier movie stars should've clued me in that Man on a Ledge wasn't exactly a high-caliber, but I was willing to give the thing a shot. Unfortunately, the ludicrous plot and horribly written dialog ends up being a painful affair to suffer through. The actors try, but are given an impossible task at which they simply can't succeed.
The film's title gives away a substantial amount of the plot, but why Nick Cassidy (Sam Worthington) is out on that ledge is the question that seems to take forever to answer. We learn from a flashback that Nick, a former cop, was in jail for stealing a pristine and large diamond from stereotypical nasty rich guy David Englander (Ed Harris) -- a crime which he denies he committed. When his father dies, Nick is able to obtain a day leave from prison to attend the funeral. While there, he manages to escape only to find himself months (years? maybe days?) later on the ledge of a hotel building threatening to jump. There's a well-thought out reason Nick's there involving some insanely convoluted plan involving his brother (Jamie Bell) and his sassy Latina girlfriend (Genesis Rodriguez) to prove his innocence, but the attempt to clear his name is so ridiculously ludicrous that it's utterly laughable.
It shouldn't have been surprising when I looked at director Asger Leth's imdb page that Man on a Ledge is his first feature film. There's simply not a grasp at how to handle the action on display and he certainly fails at achieving any emotional attachment to the characters. Then again, Leth really isn't the film's biggest problem which is an awful script from Pablo F. Fenjves who also happens to be having his first foray into feature films with this piece of junk. One needs only to look at the extraneous sidekick cop character of Edward Burns or the completely unnecessary tv news reporter played by Kyra Sedgwick to know that both Leth and Fenjves were failures at learning how to edit themselves -- just two of the many things in this movie that could have and should have been left on the cutting room floor.
The film's title gives away a substantial amount of the plot, but why Nick Cassidy (Sam Worthington) is out on that ledge is the question that seems to take forever to answer. We learn from a flashback that Nick, a former cop, was in jail for stealing a pristine and large diamond from stereotypical nasty rich guy David Englander (Ed Harris) -- a crime which he denies he committed. When his father dies, Nick is able to obtain a day leave from prison to attend the funeral. While there, he manages to escape only to find himself months (years? maybe days?) later on the ledge of a hotel building threatening to jump. There's a well-thought out reason Nick's there involving some insanely convoluted plan involving his brother (Jamie Bell) and his sassy Latina girlfriend (Genesis Rodriguez) to prove his innocence, but the attempt to clear his name is so ridiculously ludicrous that it's utterly laughable.
It shouldn't have been surprising when I looked at director Asger Leth's imdb page that Man on a Ledge is his first feature film. There's simply not a grasp at how to handle the action on display and he certainly fails at achieving any emotional attachment to the characters. Then again, Leth really isn't the film's biggest problem which is an awful script from Pablo F. Fenjves who also happens to be having his first foray into feature films with this piece of junk. One needs only to look at the extraneous sidekick cop character of Edward Burns or the completely unnecessary tv news reporter played by Kyra Sedgwick to know that both Leth and Fenjves were failures at learning how to edit themselves -- just two of the many things in this movie that could have and should have been left on the cutting room floor.
The RyMickey Rating: D
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