Spies are smart and spy movies deserve to be clever - but this it not.
It’s hard to really pin down what The Cold Light of Day is supposed to achieve. It reads like a concept reel for emerging leading man Henry Cavill who will proceed to star as Superman in next year’s Man of Steel but it makes so many concessions to the sensibilities of a spy movie that it’s never going to a real jumping point for Cavill. Director Mabrouk El Mechri is almost entirely to blame here, making the most unremarkable decisions that force us to reexamine the intrinsic cleverness of spy fiction. The result is a watery, meandering spy movie that manages even at its best moments to be completely ordinary.
Will Shaw (Henry Cavill) is barely a day into his
vacation in Spain when financial problems at home in San Francisco threaten to
shorten the trip. After a dispute with his father (Bruce Willis) on the
family’s rented boat, Will decides to swim ashore for a break. He returns to
find his family gone and a call for help at the local police station ends in
more trouble. Discovering that he can recover his kidnapped family by giving up
a certain briefcase, Will must beat the clock to unravel the underlying mystery
but not before he encounters corrupted CIA agent (Sigourney Weaver) and his
lost sister (Verónica Echegui).
On one hand, it’s easy to be enthusiastic about
engrossing yourself in the story but on the other, The Cold Light of Day gives
very few reasons why you should. Better spy movies have thrived on providing
viewers with at least some clue on what motivates each character to retrieve an
important object, kill a person or escape from capture so the audience can make
sense of what transpires onscreen. The Cold Light of Day, quite questionably,
never reveals or alludes to the life-or-death contents of the briefcase,
meaning the biggest difficulty is in believing the necessity of all the
carnage. It’s perfectly reasonable that Will is willing to fire his first shot
and participate in a mad car chase only because he wants to save his family.
But it’s hardly convincing to have pockets of mercenaries and agents chasing a
briefcase that might as well be empty.
Such is the silliness of The Cold Light of Day that it
often struggles to establish what exactly any of its characters intend to accomplish.
If Weaver’s character is indeed the CIA agent she claims to be, then she must
be the dumbest agent to ever be enlisted. With the briefcase already tucked
away in her car seat, she turns a mission-accomplished situation into a
senseless civilian killing spree as she trades car paint with Will’s vehicle
down the busy streets of Madrid. Spy movies usually ask the audience to forgive
some disbelief in order to enjoy them but The Cold Light of Day is by far the
most demanding. The slightest bit of investigation into the weak plot will
crumble the movie faster than a fragile egg tart.
Fortunately, there remains a vestige of believability in
Will. As an innocent civilian unwittingly hooked into a web of dangerous games
between mercenaries and agents, Cavill brings a sort of genuine clumsiness to
his role, allowing the audience to easily buy his character. For this reason,
there won’t be any explosive set-piece or many scenes featuring hand-to-hand
combat. There’re a few tricks to prevent the action scenes from becoming too
stale and while some of the stunts are decent efforts, others don’t always
work. Handcuffed between the tragic decision to set most of the action scenes
in the night and the already blurry shots of fast-moving action taken by
handheld cameras, you would be hard pressed to find any shot of action that
isn’t obscured in any way.
It’s a shame because The Cold Light of Day has a talented
cast which can actually do justice to the action. However, none of them bothers
to offer a performance that’s required to make other scenes work. Cavill comes
across poorly as a man who’s truly shocked that his family’s been kidnapped,
responding to a call from the kidnappers with an uncanny calmness while Weaver
maintains a surprisingly stoical composure throughout. Willis’s character is
quickly written out of the story before he could show his acting chops. In a
year filled with other spy movies like Total Recall, The Bourne Legacy and the
upcoming Bond film, The Cold Light of Day looks like a distant relative.
RATING 2/5
This review can also be viewed @ http://www.moviexclusive.com/detail.php?c=37&desc=C&p=1446&t=the-cold-light-of-day-2012_1446.
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