Chicago Sun-Times

STARS ELEVATE PREDICTABL­E ‘ BODYGUARD’

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A stage musical based on “The Bodyguard,” starring Deborah Cox, runs through Sunday at the Oriental Theatre. Here’s what Roger Ebert said about the movie upon its release almost 25 yeas ago:

The ads for “The Bodyguard” make it look like a romance, but actually it’s a study of two lifestyles: of a pop music superstar whose fame and fortune depend on millions of fans, and of a profession­al bodyguard who makes his living by protecting her from those fans. The movie does contain a love story, but it’s the kind of guarded passion that grows between two people who spend a lot of time keeping their priorities straight.

The star is Rachel Marron, played by Whitney Houston, and is as rich and famous as ... Whitney Houston. The bodyguard is Frank Farmer ( Kevin Costner), who got his training in the Secret Service and still blames himself for the fact that Ronald Reagan got shot, even though he had an excellent excuse for being away from work that day. Now Farmer hires himself out at $ 3,000 a week to guard celebritie­s, and is careful not to get involved.

Of course that’s easy at the outset. He is hired by Marron’s man- ager after the singer gets death threats. It’s not love at first sight. The convention­s of this genre require that the star and bodyguard have to get off on the wrong foot; she doesn’t want him meddling with her lifestyle and freedom, and he doesn’t have any respect for an uncooperat­ive client.

Eventually the tension between them melts, and there is a sort of love affair, based mostly on mutual proximity ( they never talk about much but their profession­al relationsh­ip, and the skills of his job). There’s an odd, effective dating scene where she leaves her mansion to visit his cluttered, grim little apartment ( and a peculiar moment with a samurai sword and a scarf that is undeniably erotic).

Meanwhile, Farmer gets to know some of the members of Rachel’s retinue, including her son, her sister, her manager and her obnoxious press agent ( Gary Kemp). These people are supported by Marron, and live with her on her terms, creating eddies of jealousy and palace intrigue. She is aware of her power, and tells Farmer she is essentiall­y a nice person who is considered a bitch by a lot of people, and wishes that weren’t so. Houston is effective at suggesting both sides of that personalit­y.

The death threats keep coming in. There is a frightenin­g scene at a charity concert, where Marron places her personal safety in the hands of a mob, and Farmer, with all of his skills, is powerless to protect her. I was less impressed by the scenes where he wires her estate with security cameras, and at one point goes crashing through her shrubbery in pursuit of a suspicious van. What’s he going to do? Leap onto the roof and hammer his way in through the windshield? The movie was written by Lawrence Kasdan (“Body Heat,” “Grand Canyon”) and directed by Mick Jackson, and contains a little of the Hollywood insider cynicism Kasdan suggested in the Steve Martin character in “Grand Canyon.” The willingnes­s of the press agent to risk anything for publicity is noted, as well as the star’s sense of personal invulnerab­ility. This is Houston’s screen debut, and she is at home in the role; she photograph­s wonderfull­y, and has a warm smile, and yet is able to suggest selfish and egotistica­l dimensions in the character. Costner hugs her with his eyes open, scanning the room for surprise attacks.

The movie was made as a thriller, I suppose, because of boxoffice considerat­ions. I felt a little cheated by the outcome, although I should have been able to predict it, using my Law of Economy of Characters, which teaches that no movie contains any unnecessar­y characters, so that an apparently superfluou­s character is probably the killer. I thought the basic situation in “The Bodyguard” was intriguing enough to sustain a film all by itself: on the one hand, a star who grows rich through the adulation that fans feel for her, and on the other hand, a working man who, for a salary, agrees to substitute his body as a target instead of hers. Makes you think.

 ??  ?? Kevin Costner stars as Frank Farmer, an ex- Secret Service agent who now makes his living as a profession­al bodyguard. Whitney Houston stars as Rachel Marron, a pop superstar who is forced to hire him after she receives death threats.
| SUN- TIMES...
Kevin Costner stars as Frank Farmer, an ex- Secret Service agent who now makes his living as a profession­al bodyguard. Whitney Houston stars as Rachel Marron, a pop superstar who is forced to hire him after she receives death threats. | SUN- TIMES...
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