The 15:17 to Paris ** /
*****
Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Written by: Dorothy Blyskal based on
the book by Anthony Sadler and Alek Skarlatos and Spencer Stone and Jeffrey E.
Stern.
Starring: Spencer Stone (Airman
Spencer Stone), Anthony Sadler (Anthony Sadler), Alek Skarlatos (Specialist
Alek Skarlatos), Jenna Fischer (Heidi Skarlatos), Judy Greer (Joyce Eskel), Cole
Eichenberger (Young Spencer Stone), Paul-Mikél Williams (Young Anthony Sadler),
Bryce Gheisar (Young Alek Skarlatos), Ray Corasani (Ayoub El-Khazzani), Thomas
Lennon (School Principal), Jaleel White (Garrett Walden), Tony Hale (Gym
Teacher), P.J. Byrne (Mr. Henry - Hallway Monitor).
It’s
easy to see what drew 87 year old icon Clint Eastwood to the story of three
young Americans, two of them in the armed forces, who happened to be a train
from Amsterdam to Paris when a terrorist, armed with an assault rifle and
hundreds of rounds of ammunition, tried to carry out a deadly attack – only to
be foiled by those three men, with the assistance of others on board the train.
It is a story of everyday heroism and how violence is sometimes necessary to
prevent even worse violence. But Eastwood never really finds his way into the
material here, never really figures out what he’s trying to say with the film.
Eastwood’s films have always been about violence – its causes and its effects,
and while his films often argue violence is necessary, they also usually argue
that it comes with some sort of cost. This film never gets that chance, as it
climaxes with the violence, and then has a hasty reconstructed ceremony
honoring the heroes, and then just ends. The attack itself is handled very well
by Eastwood – most of what leads up to it is horribly awkward.
Part,
but not all, of that awkwardness comes from the fact that Eastwood cast the
real life people – Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler and Alek Skarlatos – to play
themselves. There are directors who excel at working with non-professionals,
and drawing great performances out of them – but Eastwood is not one of them (I
cannot help but think that Eastwood’s famous quick shooting style of only
liking one or two takes cannot help amateurs, who clearly don’t know what they’re
doing). All three performances are awkward – although at a certain point, they
also become somewhat charming. Perhaps it’s because the dialogue for some the
pros is so brutally awful, that they don’t come across any better (poor Jenna
Fischer and Judy Greer can do absolutely nothing with their roles). The film
spends an absurd amount of time on the three young men in high school (middle
school?) as all three of them get into trouble, but find each other as friends –
and remain so, even when circumstances force them apart. This segment has a
whole lot of wonderful actors – Thomas Lennon, Jaleel White, Tony Hale, P.J.
Bryne – show up for a scene or two, and then disappear having not done very
much.
The
rest of the movie is about the trio as they travel through Europe – Italy, Berlin,
and Amsterdam- on a collision course with that train we know they will
eventually get on. Eastwood has many gifts as a director – making a casual,
hangout film isn’t one of them (I would love to see behind the scenes footage
of Eastwood at that club in Amsterdam though if some exists).
What’s
most disappointing to me about The 15:17 to Paris though is how simple Eastwood
makes this all seem – how straight forward. Eastwood is a conservative
filmmaker to be sure, but over the years, his films have taken more pointed
shots at violence, patriotism and heroism than most liberal filmmakers have. He
has rarely depicted even violence as one sided (the criticism that drove me
nuts about American Sniper is that Eastwood had made a career of “white hats”
and “black hats” – clearly defined characters of good and evil, which make me
wonder if those saying that had seen any of his films at all). His last truly great
films – Flags of Our Father and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) were two sides of
the same coin – showing both the American and Japanese version of that battle,
the American version really questioning how America identifies and celebrate
war heroes, and the Japanese side showing honor of America’s enemy. The blind
spot for Eastwood here is Islamic extremism – a subject he has now tackled
twice in American Sniper and The 15:17 to Paris. I didn’t mind that he didn’t have
any Iraqis as real characters in American Sniper – that was a film that honed
in on the perspective of a man who experienced the war through a sniper rifle,
at a distance, when the enemies would have been faceless. There is no such
excuse in The 15:17 to Paris – where the heroes get up close and personal with
the terrorist. He is as faceless as the enemies in American Sniper – we have no
idea what led him to that train or why. Eastwood, it seems, doesn’t care.
I
really do hope that Eastwood sticks around for a while longer, and directs some
more films. When he goes, he will leave a hole in Hollywood that will be
impossible to fill. Having said that, it’s pretty hard to argue that The 15:17
to Paris is one of the worst films Eastwood has ever directed – a misjudged
film, made a filmmaker without the skillset to pull it off. You want to admire
it for all sorts of reasons, but it just isn’t very good.
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