Baywatch
** / *****
Directed
by: Seth
Gordon.
Written
by: Damian
Shannon & Mark Swift and Jay Scherick & David Ronn and Thomas Lennon
& Robert Ben Garant based on the series created by Michael Berk &
Douglas Schwartz and Gregory J. Bonann.
Starring:
Dwayne
Johnson (Mitch Buchannon), Zac Efron (Matt Brody), Priyanka Chopra (Victoria
Leeds), Alexandra Daddario (Summer Quinn), Kelly Rohrbach (CJ Parker), Ilfenesh
Hadera (Stephanie Holden), Jon Bass (Ronnie Greenbaum), Yahya Abdul-Mateen II
(Sgt. Ellerbee), Hannibal Buress (Dave the Tech), Rob Huebel (Captain Thorpe),
Amin Joseph (Frankie), Jack Kesy (Leon), Oscar Nuñez (Councilman Rodriguez),
David Hasselhoff (The Mentor), Pamela Anderson (Casey Jean Parker), Clem Cheung
(Murray Chen).
I’ll admit that as a young man, I
watched a lot of Baywatch. It wasn’t because I particularly liked the show, and
it wasn’t wholly because in the days before we had the internet in my house, it
was a good source to watch bouncing boobs in slow motion. I think it had more
to do with the fact that it was always on late Saturday afternoons, and was one
of the only shows (along with Kung Fu: The Legend Continues) that my family
could all get some sort of enjoyment out of. It was always a cheesy show, and
it was never very good – and I knew that even when I started watching it when I
was around 10. But because it aired in the 1990s, and was popular, and now
people my age and a little older seem to be in charge of everything, we got to
keep bringing back all the crap that was popular in that decade. So, here’s
Seth Gordon’s Baywatch.
To be fair to the film, it is
probably about as good as it could possibly be. No, that still isn’t good, but
the filmmakers at least have enough sense that they don’t take the premise at
all seriously, and poke fun of it (and the series it’s based on) pretty much
from beginning to end. It also does well to cast Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron
as the low leads – Johnson as Mitch Buchannan, and David Hasselhoff role, as
leader of the Baywatch crew, and Efron as Matt Brody, the young hotshot who
needs to learn the ropes. I do wish that the film paid any sort of attention to
any of the other characters.
The premise of the movie is
knowingly ridiculous – Leeds (Priyanka Chopra) – is a drug dealer, with a high
society veneer, and for reasons that confuse Efron’s character to no end, it’s
up to the lifeguards to stop her (“Am I really the only one who thinks we
should just call the police” he asks at one point, and apparently, he is). Yet,
for the most part, the film exists as an excuse to string cheesy gross out
gags, one liners and slow motion shots on CJ Parker (Kelly Rohrbach) running,
mostly followed by jokes about her running.
I do wish that the film had paid
some more attention to the actors around Johnson and Efron. They get all the
good lines, all the good moments, and basically the female characters are
reduced to bouncing boobs, and tight ass shots – and making jokes about those
doesn’t prevent them from being shallow – at least not as much as the film
thinks it does. Alexandra Daddario, who plays Summer, has been good in other
roles – but she’s given nothing of interest to do. I don’t know if model turned
actress Rohrbach is any good as an actress at all, because the movie doesn’t
even attempt to give her a personality. Say what you want about the sexism of
the original series – and you could say plenty, but the female characters in it
were real character – and not just bouncing
boobs.
Having said all of that, I cannot
say I hated Baywatch. I certainly didn’t like it, but perhaps because I
expected it to be so awful, I actually found myself laughing at a few moments,
and generally watching the film wasn’t overtly painful. It’s way too long
(nearly two hours) and is deeply, deeply flawed. But I’m not sure it’s possible
to make a good big screen version of Baywatch – and this film kind of backs
that theory up.
No comments:
Post a Comment