Oman Daily Observer

‘Skyscraper’ towers over summer schedule of sequels

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said at the premiere in New York on Wednesday. The Universal release casts the former wrestler as a retired amputee FBI hostage rescuer turned security expert who has to clear his name and snare the bad guys when the world’s tallest building goes up in flames in Hong Kong.

It’s been a tough few months for film fans desperate to see something a little more nuanced than giant robots and men in tights larruping each other repeatedly in mid-air.

“There are 11 sequels on either side of us in our corridor. Who really gets to say they are in an original movie that this brilliant mind created from scratch?” said “Skyscraper” producer Beau Flynn, gesturing down the arrivals line to writerdire­ctor Rawson Marshall Thurber.

“Everything was created from his head and it is something that has to be admired, I think, by the audience, and hopefully supported.

It’s very hard to do that at this scale in Hollywood today.”

“Avengers: Infinity War” and “Deadpool 2” kicked off the blockbuste­r season, although both were released before what most people think of as the peak period, when school’s out and kids are begging to see the latest Marvel or DC offering.

Since late May, we’ve been treated to “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” “Action Point” — part of the “Jackass” series of movies — “Ocean’s 8,” “Incredible­s 2,” “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom,” “Sicario: Day of the Soldado,” “The First Purge” and “Antman and the Wasp.”

If they all sound familiar, it’s probably because you’ve seen or heard about their relatively similar predecesso­rs — and we still have “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again,” “The Equalizer 2” and “Mission: Impossible — Fallout” to sit through before the August schedules bring back more creative storytelli­ng.

It hasn’t entirely been a summer of retreads, capes and spandex suits, of course.

ONE-AND-DONE “Adrift,” based on the true story of a couple who get stranded in the Pacific Ocean, was a “one-and-done” but its uninspirin­g box office was largely offset by a budget constraine­d to around $35 million.

Horror hit “Hereditary,” sports comedy “Uncle Drew,” knockabout comedy “Tag” and noir thriller “Hotel Artemis” were also originals — but made independen­tly or on much lower budgets by the bigger studios. Universal pushed the boat out for “Skyscraper,” splashing out $125 million on a movie that has around 1,600 visual effects shots.

Ironically, given its unique status among the summer sequels, “Skyscraper” has been criticised for being derivative, and was liked by just 49 of 100 critics whose reviews were collated by the Rotten Tomatoes website.

It has been admired in some quarters, however, for presenting women in empowering roles, including Neve Campbell, who plays Johnson’s hard-asnails ex-military wife.

“As a woman right now, to be able to play a role that might be a role model for younger girls who can say, ‘It’s all right to be strong and courageous and successful in your own right. That feels good,” Campbell said.

Johnson, who is not usually a political figure, used a central theme of the movie to fire a red carpet fusillade at President Donald Trump — whom he didn’t name — for separating migrant children from their parents at the southern border and locking them in cages.

“(‘Skyscraper’) has an anchor, and that anchor is family — protecting your family and keeping your family together.

Very relevant these days, considerin­g everything that’s happening,” he said.

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