Reviewed by Craig McPherson
Stars Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Garner, Chris Cooper, Jason Bateman,
Ashraf Barhom, Jeremy Piven, Ali Suliman, Richard Jenkins
Written by Matthew Michael Carnahan
Produced by Michael Mann & Peter Berg
Certification UK 15 | US R | Australia MA
Runtime 110 minutes
Directed by Peter Berg
If there’s one flaw plaguing The Kingdom, it’s that it tries to be all things to all people. OK, maybe not all things as it definitely doesn’t try the romance angle. That’s not to say The Kingdom isn’t a terrific film, because it is. However, it should have been decided at the outset to make this movie either a political or action thriller.
Carnahan’s script starts out hitting all the right action beats as it unfolds with a vicious terrorist attack on a Saudi compound housing employees of an American oil company (the movie draws inspiration from the 2003 compound bombing in Riyadh). From there the movie almost threatens to get bogged down as it shifts focus to the political machinations both hindering and enabling a joint Saudi/FBI investigation. Fortunately, Berg pulls the film out of this quagmire that threatens to put the breaks on the movie almost as surely as the political attempts to nix the joint investigation.
With the political jabber out of the way, The Kingdom gets down to the meat of the script, shifting the Saudi investigation into high gear and refusing to take its foot off the accelerator. The movie deserves full marks for refusing to dumb down its story and make the Saudis appear as little more than window dressing to a big screen American shoot-'em-up. While Foxx, Garner, Cooper and Bateman all get top billing, the real star of this story is Barhom who plays Saudi police Col. Al-Ghazi, a man dedicated to his profession, with an acute sense of fair play, protocol and justice. Al-Ghazi, who was at the scene of the initial attack on the compound, initially plays the role of hamstrung go-between relegated to babysitting and restricting the movements of the FBI at the urging of higher-ups. However, thanks to a fortuitous face-to-face between the American “guests” and a Saudi Prince, Al-Ghazi is given free reign to lead the US investigators as they try to uncover the mastermind behind the attack.
From there, the audience is treated to a top notch story that nicely touches on everything from culture clashes, forensic revelations, kidnapping, religious doctrine, and the self perpetuation of hate, all of which culminates in a final half hour of riveting, vicious, blood spattering action. I said The Kingdom suffered from one flaw? On second thought, make that two. It’s also yet another victim of the hand-held cameraman suffering from Delirium Tremens, complete with blurry and shaky shots that rarely allow the viewer to actually focus on the images being played out. One day Hollywood will learn that this type of cinematography just doesn’t cut it. Sadly, this is not that day. That said, The Kingdom delivers a smart, taught, evenly balanced thriller that easily shapes up as a heavyweight in this year’s run for the Oscar.
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SECOND OPINION | Cassam Looch **½ Boasting an all-star cast and bookended by two terrific cinematic sequences, The Kingdom is let down by a submission to typical Hollywood action in its final act that undoes most of what goes before. A blistering animated opening which incorporates the last century of US/Saudi relations in the most honest depiction I’ve seen sets the film off perfectly. And following another great if brutal attack on US interests we delve into an intricate and tightly scripted investigation which seems to be covering all bases.
Unfortunately before we get to the chilling final words of the film, we are subjected to a gung-ho shoot first, ask questions later rescue mission which ends far too neatly for everyone from the ‘right’ side. Where as there seemed to be a balance before, we now end up with a rather lurid death toll and glamorisation of American military mite. Foxx’s no nonsense character and indeed the reactionary unit he commands are refreshingly honest for this sort of film, it would have been all too easy to make them wishy-washy liberals or knuckle-dragging rednecks. They all do a good job portraying what must be going through their minds in this situation, but the characterization is jettisoned all to quickly...
It’s a shame because this is 75% a solid film, with some great moments, but the shoot-'em-up finale lets it down badly (its not even that original for anyone whose seen Harrison Ford’s Columbian set Clear and Present Danger).