www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Non-Stop, film review: Liam Neeson's tough guy act is on target in this suspenseful drama

3.00

(12A) Jaume Collet-Serra, 106 mins Starring: Liam Neeson, Julianne Moore, Michelle Dockery, Linus Roache, Scoot McNairy

Alfred Hitchcock famously distinguished between "surprise" and "suspense". If a bomb goes off without forewarning, that's surprise. If we, as an audience, are tipped off in advance that the timer is running and that the bomb will explode at precisely one o'clock, that is suspense.

The Spanish director Jaume Collet-Serra and his writers Chris Roach and John Richardson take a very literal approach to Hitchcock's definition of suspense. Again and again in the fitfully entertaining but wildly manipulative Non-Stop, we see stopwatches being set.

Michelle Dockery interview: Downton's Lady Mary talks starring with Liam Neeson

Again and again, we are warned that catastrophe is imminent. "In exactly 20 minutes, I am going to kill someone on this plane," the unknown villain tells us in a text. That is only the first of the timed warnings that are dotted throughout the movie.

The film-makers borrow randomly from 1970s disaster movies and from pot-boiling, Agatha Christie-style whodunits. You sense that they've been through a thorough checklist of plot elements and character types before the plane has even been allowed to take off. Yes, there is a doctor aboard. Yes, among the passengers is a doe-eyed little girl hugging a teddy bear. Poison? Yes. Bomb? Yes. Airplane captain flirting with glamorous flight attendant? Yes. Parachute? Yes. Couple having sex in business class? Yes. Turbulence? Yes. People vomiting and dying because of eating airline food? No.

Non-Stop is not a film that will appeal to the airline industry. In its lesser moments, it seems like just another crudely mechanical and increasingly preposterous thriller set during a particularly hellish plane journey. However, true to the title, it does indeed strike a relentless narrative tempo. There are at least hints that Collet-Serra is trying to push beyond the genre's conventions.

It helps that the 61-year-old lead, Liam Neeson, has a gravitas and a brooding sense of melancholy that younger action stars often lack. Just so we know that he is on the washed-up side, he is shown here early on stirring his paper cup of whisky with his toothbrush. His character, Bill Marks, is a US Air Marshal who has been traumatised by a family tragedy. Marks has taken to drink, is full of self-pity and (somewhat ridiculously, given his job) has an acute fear of flying. Initially, he seems closer to Ray Milland in The Lost Weekend, Billy Wilder's famous 1945 drama about alcoholism, than he does to Jason Bourne.

It's a mystery as to why an actress as accomplished as Julianne Moore would take a role as skimpily written as the one she has here (Universal Pictures) It's a mystery as to why an actress as accomplished as Julianne Moore would take a role as skimpily written as the one she has here (Universal Pictures)
Collet-Serra, who also directed Neeson in Unknown, sets up the film in intriguing fashion. We see the hungover Marks making his way on to the plane, eyeing up fellow passengers, who come in all ages and all guises. He is expecting a routine flight and even makes small talk with Jen Summers (Julianne Moore), a glamorous but aloof woman whose yearning to sit in a window seat seems suspicious.

When it all gets too much for Neeson, his default behaviour is to lock himself in the bathroom and have a fag. At times here, we half suspect that he might be as delusional as the insomniac office worker in David Fincher's Fight Club, an Air Marshal seeing phantoms where none exist. Even more intriguingly, there are moments when Neeson doesn't seem quite sure whether he is the hero or the villain. "Control is an illusion," he is told by his antagonist. Crossing the Atlantic with a maniac in their midst, 40,000 feet in the air, he and the passengers crammed into the plane are powerless to influence events.

It is a testament to Neeson that he is able to give us so much sense of his character's inner life in an action movie that is otherwise so one-dimensional. He has a wounded-lion quality as he blunders up and down the aisles.

The rest of the cast have largely thankless and underwritten roles. Michelle Dockery is a doughty, quick-thinking flight attendant. She at least has a few lines of dialogue. That's more than her fellow attendant Lupita Amondi Nyong'o, so striking in 12 Years a Slave but shamefully underused here. It is likewise a mystery as to why an actress as accomplished as Julianne Moore would take a role as skimpily written as the one she has here.

There are fleeting references to 9/11 and the terror it unleashed in the American public. Not that Collet-Serra wants to probe too far into the politics of fear. This is ultimately a fairground ride of a movie in which the aim is to excite and terrify audiences, not to provoke too much thought.

Michelle Dockery plays a doughty, quick-thinking flight attendant (Universal Pictures) Michelle Dockery plays a doughty, quick-thinking flight attendant (Universal Pictures)
Thanks to the cryptic but threatening text messages he has been receiving on his secure phone, Neeson knows that his Moriarty- like adversary is on the plane, probably sitting only a few feet from him. One of the pleasures of the film is the Cluedo-like game of trying to identify the villain. It could be anybody.

Some of the action scenes are very cleverly handled. There is a tremendous fight sequence in the tiny airplane bathroom, where space is so tight that it is barely possible to even throw a punch. The film-makers play up the claustrophobic settings as much as they do the time constraints.

"It doesn't make any sense," Neeson's character laments as he struggles forlornly to work out his adversary's motivation and behaviour. The remark could just as well apply to the plot, which becomes increasingly absurd the further the flight progresses.

Then again, there is no reason why suspense movies need to be logical or coherent. All they need is a bomb under the table (or in the overhead locker) and plenty of advanced warning that it is going to go off... unless Liam Neeson saves everyone first. Neeson's emergence so late in his career as one of contemporary cinema's most bankable tough guys may be surprising but he certainly can't be accused of skimping his action-man duties here.

VIDEO
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition iPad app?
Arts & Entertainment
Naomi Watts stars as Princess Diana which came out on top at this year's Barfta Awards
arts + ents Awards recognise the clangers to have disgraced the screen this year
News
PARK CITY, UT - JANUARY 19: Philip Seymour Hoffman poses for a portrait during the 2014 Sundance Film Festival at the Getty Images Portrait Studio at the Village At The Lift on January 19, 2014 in Park City, Utah.
news
Arts & Entertainment
tv Will Dean reveals his top 10 BBC detectives
News
Torode says of his home country: 'I didn't really play football or drink beer. I cooked, which was pretty un-Australian. And I didn't really like Australian music...'
news Presenter doesn’t like beer or Aussie Rules football
Arts & Entertainment
Paul Walker tops list of the most searched for People of 2013
film Paul Walker was killed in November
Independent
Travel Shop
the manor
Old Swan & Minster Mill, Oxfordshire
from £139prpn Find out more
santorini
Boutique Kefalonia holiday
from £549pp Find out more
sardina foodie
Rocco Forte Hotel Amigo
from £146prpn Find out more
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition iPad app?

ES Rentals

    Independent Dating
    and  

    By clicking 'Search' you
    are agreeing to our
    Terms of Use.

    Ticket to slide: How Team GB's skeleton women conquered the slopes at the Winter Olympics

    Ticket to slide: How Team GB's skeleton

    Tom Peck reveals how the team conquered the slopes at the Winter Olympics
    Sex in men's prisons: 'The US system cultivates rape. If you treat people like animals, they behave like it'

    Sex in men's prisons: 'The US system cultivates rape'

    Shaun Attwood's book, Prison Time, details the sex – consensual or otherwise – the prostitution, the pimping and the equal, loving relationships behind bars

    Wes Anderson and Hollywood's best props

    Meet the designer tasked with bringing the director's films to life
    'I'm a rubbish Australian': MasterChef's John Torode goes back to his roots

    John Torode: 'I'm a rubbish Australian'

    Gerard Gilbert meets the chef and TV presenter to discuss his first big solo project, a new series for Good Food Channel called John Torode's Australia
    The experts' guide to the perfect pancake

    The experts' guide to the perfect pancake

    Shrove Tuesday is nearly upon us. Get tossing with Mark Hix's classic batter, plus some of the planet's best pancake joints reveal their favourite toppings
    Enemy within: The network of Britons who spied for Hitler during Second World War

    Enemy within

    The network of Britons who spied for Hitler during Second World War
    Oscar Pistorius murder trial: what should we expect?

    Oscar Pistorius trial: what should we expect?

    The murder trial of the world's most famous disabled athlete begins in Pretoria next week
    Non-Stop, film review: Liam Neeson's tough guy act is on target in this suspenseful drama

    Neeson's tough guy act is on target in Non-Stop

    Non-Stop is not a film that will appeal to the airline industry but, true to the title, it strikes a relentless narrative tempo
    All the presidents' meals: A new memoir spills the beans on cooking at the White House

    White House chef spills the beans

    John Moeller cooked family meals for the Bushes and Clintons, and banquets for world leaders
    Citizen clean: Campaigners frustrated with the Government's failure to cut the amount of air pollution are uniting to tackle 'invisible killer'

    Citizen clean: Campaigners tackle air pollution

    Campaigners frustrated with the Government’s failure to cut the amount of air pollution in our cities are uniting to tackle the ‘invisible killer’ themselves
    Spritz promises to boost reading speeds to a breakneck 500 words a minute - will it enhance our enjoyment of literature?

    Will Spritz enhance our enjoyment of literature?

    The new app promises to boost reading speeds to a breakneck 500 words a minute
    Wanderlust: 10 best Asia travel books

    Wanderlust: 10 best Asia travel books

    If you’re heading east or want to learn more about the continent, take a guided tour
    Nicolas Anelka 'quenelle' gesture: Split second that changed everything

    Split second that changed everything

    Whatever he may have intended, English football now knows more than it would like about Dieudonné and his gesture
    Dark shadow of Allen Stanford grips Antigua

    Dark shadow of Allen Stanford grips Antigua

    The ECB may have tried to quickly forget the 'Twenty20 for 20' but the fraudster's downfall cost thousands of jobs and left a giant hole in the island's economy
    Stephen Roche: Ireland is ready for Giro d'Italia's grand start

    Stephen Roche: Ireland is ready for Giro d'Italia's grand start

    The cycling legend on how Belfast has geared up for May's big event