White House Down (2013)
Starring Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Jason Clarke, Joey King, Richard Jenkins, and James Woods
Directed by Roland Emmerich
I keep trying to tell myself that I shouldn't like Channing Tatum. I keep telling myself that I should laugh off all of his movies. I keep saying that since the ladies love him I should automatically carry some disdain towards him. Because of this, it was easy to avoid Tatum's summer action picture White House Down. Of course, that wasn't the only reason to scoff at this film. I could certainly do without Jamie Foxx's irksome overacting and this was the second movie to come out within five months detailing a terroristic takeover of the White House following Olympus Has Fallen. Plus, the trailer for Olympus seemed much better than this Roland Emmerich-directed "blockbuster." Having watched Olympus Has Fallen a few months ago and finding it disappointing, when White House Down arrived in my mailbox last week, I was actually irritated that I hadn't reordered my Netflix queue. Needless to say, White House Down proved to be surprisingly enjoyable -- a film that doesn't necessarily do a single thing we haven't seen before, but somehow manages to revel in its ridiculousness and keep things rocking and rolling for over two hours.
Like I said, White House Down doesn't reinvent the wheel. Channing Tatum is Cale, a security officer for the Speaker of the House (Richard Jenkins). Hoping for something more, he heads to the White House for an interview, bringing with him his precocious eleven year-old daughter (Joey King). After being interviewed by Finnerty (Maggie Gyllenhaal), one of the President's high-ranking Secret Service officers and (of course) a former fling of Cale's, Cale and his daughter bogart their way into a White House tour. While on the tour, the White House finds itself under attack, taken over by a crew of men headed by the leading Secret Service agent Walker (James Woods), a man upset by the President's foreign relations policies that caused Walker's military son to be killed in combat. Naturally, Cale springs into action, doing what he can to protect the well-liked President Sawyer (Jamie Foxx) along with his daughter.
Honestly, I could've written the basic story behind White House Down, but I must give credit to director Roland Emmerich and screenwriter James Vanderbilt who keep the flick moving along at a steady pace punctuating some of the most ridiculously over-the-top action sequences with humorous quips wherein the characters themselves admit the ridiculousness of said action sequences. Tatum is certainly game for both the action scenes and he's already proven himself a charmingly sly comedian. Jamie Foxx is shockingly understated -- I was pleasantly surprised by the way he allowed his presidential character to play second fiddle to Tatum. The supporting cast from Woods to Jenkins to Gyllenhaal all give better performances than is to be expected in a movie like this.
So, I must say that no one is more shocked than me to say that White House Down is worth your time and better than it really should be. I think I need to admit that Channing Tatum isn't nearly as bad as I want him to be.
Like I said, White House Down doesn't reinvent the wheel. Channing Tatum is Cale, a security officer for the Speaker of the House (Richard Jenkins). Hoping for something more, he heads to the White House for an interview, bringing with him his precocious eleven year-old daughter (Joey King). After being interviewed by Finnerty (Maggie Gyllenhaal), one of the President's high-ranking Secret Service officers and (of course) a former fling of Cale's, Cale and his daughter bogart their way into a White House tour. While on the tour, the White House finds itself under attack, taken over by a crew of men headed by the leading Secret Service agent Walker (James Woods), a man upset by the President's foreign relations policies that caused Walker's military son to be killed in combat. Naturally, Cale springs into action, doing what he can to protect the well-liked President Sawyer (Jamie Foxx) along with his daughter.
Honestly, I could've written the basic story behind White House Down, but I must give credit to director Roland Emmerich and screenwriter James Vanderbilt who keep the flick moving along at a steady pace punctuating some of the most ridiculously over-the-top action sequences with humorous quips wherein the characters themselves admit the ridiculousness of said action sequences. Tatum is certainly game for both the action scenes and he's already proven himself a charmingly sly comedian. Jamie Foxx is shockingly understated -- I was pleasantly surprised by the way he allowed his presidential character to play second fiddle to Tatum. The supporting cast from Woods to Jenkins to Gyllenhaal all give better performances than is to be expected in a movie like this.
So, I must say that no one is more shocked than me to say that White House Down is worth your time and better than it really should be. I think I need to admit that Channing Tatum isn't nearly as bad as I want him to be.
The RyMickey Rating: B
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