BASIC
Article courtesy of Andrea
Chase of KillerMovieReviews.com
BASIC, USA , 2003, MPAA
Rating: R for violence and language
The
first words we hear Tom Hardy say in BASIC is in a conversation
this ex-Army and currently DEA agent in Panama is having with
a colleague, the gist of which is that if he doesn't have the
trust of those around him, he can't function. Those are words
that will figure greatly in the twists and turns that writers
Cathy Rabin and James Vanderbilt have given this mostly solid
script. The shades of meaning will change precipitously, but
in the end, it will all come down to trust.
Hardy, played by John Travolta,
is called in by an old pal and Army base commander (Timothy
Daly), to investigate exactly what went wrong during an Army
Ranger training mission in the Panamanian jungle. A squad went
out during a hurricane, but only two of them came back, one,
Kendall, the son of a member of the joint chiefs of staff, is
gravely wounded, and Dunbar, who saved Kendall's life and refuses
to talk to anyone except another Ranger, but only one that isn't
stationed at his base. During the course of the interrogations,
we see the often conflicting stories the two men tell. Both
agree that the sergeant, played with perfect wickedness by Samuel
L. Jackson, was murdered by one of the squad. Who, how, and,
crucially, why, is open for debate as each of the men spin increasingly
different stories of what happened, each setting the other up
for a death sentence that maybe neither of them deserves. There
is also the underlying tug of conscience we feel watching events
play out, that though killing one's commanding officer is wrong,
this guy deserved it for being the meanest mother in Army, never
mind a potential assassin himself.
Director John McTiernan
starts the story slowly, but gradually builds his momentum until
by the end, the truth turns on a dime so quickly that it all
but leaves a sonic boom in its wake. With a plot like that,
it's vital that each actor plays in such a way that a villain
can become a hero and vice versa without stretching the audience's
patience or credulity. On that score, everyone scores a bull's
eye here. Travolta displays a savvy charm just this side of
smarmy, making him a perfect foil for the regular Lt. Julia
Osborne, played by Connie Nielsen (GLADIATOR), with whom he's
paired up. Nielsen is great, fuming at having her thunder stolen
but tough and still committed to get at the truth no matter
where it scampers, alleviating what could have been a clichéd
plot point. It also helps that while she's attractive, she's
not, strictly speaking, eye-candy, and when necessary, kicks
booty with the best of them. If her accent teeters between the
deep south and somewhere in Europe, well, these things happen.
Brian Van Holt as Dunbar is stalwart and simple, maybe too much
so, planting delicious doubt. Giovanni Ribisi, though, is the
more interesting of the two, playing the emotional damage of
being a great man's son to the hilt with a soigné bravado
that enjoys being the thorn in the old man's side. Also along
is Harry Connick, Jr., as a base doctor who shares a past with
Osborne and even warbles a few bars along the way.
BASIC does ask us to take
a few leaps of disbelief to jump start itself, such as base
commander calling in outside help, even if it is the best interrogator
in the known world, but it's in a good cause. Aside from a by-the-book
budding romance between Hardy and Osborne, the story get more
interesting as the time passes and while you might thing you
see what's coming, don't count on it. It's better to just sit
back and enjoy the ride.
Click here to hear Andrea
Chase's interview with John Travolta.
ANDREA
CHASE
My
Rating:





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