Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

Johnson pulls off gritty performanc­e in ‘Skyscraper’

- TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE BY KATIE WALSH

The hardest- working man in showbiz, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, debuts his third blockbuste­r action flick in nine months this weekend.

The descriptiv­ely titled “Skyscraper,” which comes on the heels of “Rampage” and “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle,” is written and directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber, who directed Johnson in the very funny buddy comedy “Central Intelligen­ce.” “Skyscraper” — a sort of reverse “Die Hard,” where a family man breaks into an imposing structure to save his family — scoots by on the thinnest of premises and an even thinner script.

In so many of his films, Johnson is like some kind of comic book superhero: cartoonish­ly strong, his biceps bulging to an unimaginab­le size — he dwarfs the usually yoked Vin Diesel in the “Fast and Furious” films. But in “Skyscraper,” Thurber seeks to diminish that strength. The camera looks down on him rather than up, and he’s outfitted in rumpled business casual rather than tactical spandex. It makes Johnson more human before we then watch him perform feats of strength and derring-do using simple machines.

Thurber handicaps Johnson’s Will Sawyer, who loses his leg in a bombing as an FBI rescue team leader 10 years prior to the events of the film. He loses the limb, but gains a wife, Sarah ( Neve Campbell), the surgeon who operated on him.

They’re in Hong Kong with their twins at the tallest skyscraper in the world, The Pearl, where Will is putting in a bid as a security consultant for the self-sustaining city in the sky. Scams, theft, arson and double-crosses ensue, and soon Will is outside The Pearl, which is on fire, trying to get in to save his trapped family as a team of thieves are trying to get out.

One has to wonder if the entirety of “Skyscraper” was reverse- engineered around a single stunt, wherein Will leaps from a constructi­on crane into a crashed-open window of The Pearl. The leap does draw gasps and cheers from the audience — both the one seated in the theater, and the onscreen audience of onlookers watching Will’s exploits on massive news screens on the street. This screen- within- a- screen device is a little slice of meta commentary laced throughout that visualizes the literal spectacle that is Johnson and his physical capabiliti­es

This depiction of how we see Johnson as an action star, and the twists in his evolution as a performer are what make “Skyscraper” interestin­g to watch. The charm is turned down, the seriousnes­s turned up and Johnson pulls it off. It’s also a refreshing change to see him have a fully realized romantic partner for once, and Campbell gets her own set of heroics to perform.

Otherwise, the plot is strangely simplistic, the special effects murky and chaotic. The cast is stacked with an array of internatio­nal actors, no doubt to appeal to a wide global audience. With a few well-delivered lines and a killer haircut, Taiwanese model and actress Hannah Quinlivan makes quite the visual impression as an entertaini­ng, if underwritt­en villain.

Thurber’s storytelli­ng is rote at best, scanty in some places, but the performers sell it with all they’ve got. “Skyscraper” is standard issue, but it makes for a compelling entry in the story of Johnson’s stardom, and his total Hollywood domination.

 ?? KIMBERLY FRENCH/ UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Dwayne Johnson in “Skyscraper.”
KIMBERLY FRENCH/ UNIVERSAL PICTURES Dwayne Johnson in “Skyscraper.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States