New York Post

‘Skyscraper’ collapses!

- Sara Stewart

THERE’S no better time than summer for a fun, brainless thriller. All it needs is a charismati­c hero, a hateable villain and a snappy screenplay. “Skyscraper,” regrettabl­y, cuts likable star Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson off at the knees by failing to deliver on the other two. (As producer, Johnson really has no one to blame but himself.)

Will Sawyer (Johnson), military veteran and former FBI hostage negotiator, now works in private security; we see his back story from a decade earlier, which involves a harrowing rescue gone wrong that left him with a prosthetic leg. He’s the breadwinne­r for his ex-naval surgeon wife Sarah (Neve Campbell) and their young twins (McKenna Roberts and Noah Cottrell), who’ve temporaril­y moved with him into a crazy-tall Hong Kong building called the Pearl, where Will is assessing safety protocols. Gazilliona­ire owner Zhao Long Ji (Chin Han) has, Will rather ominously concludes, constructe­d not only the highest but the safest structure in the world.

That security is all provided via next-level technology, the foibles of which are illustrate­d in a repeat line that’s a (probably unintentio­nal, but a geek-girl can hope) shout-out to the Brit sitcom “The IT Crowd”: “Have you tried turning it off and on again?”

There are no such switches on Johnson, who stays stuck in Action Hero Mode from the moment a terrorist (Roland Maller) and his lackeys seize control of the building, on through to the inevitable, heartwarmi­ng conclusion. The whole film feels as if it’s on autopilot, or maybe written by artificial intelligen­ce that’s been fed a steady diet of the “Die Hard” oeuvre, “Speed,” “Das Boot,” and, I’m guessing, “The Towering Inferno.” But, like most AI facsimiles, this one can’t come up with anything memorably human.

The only line I found even worth jotting down in my notebook was, “If you can’t fix it with duct tape, you’re not using enough duct tape.” (Amen.) It’s a bummer coming from director Rawson Marshall Thurber, whose 2016 feature “Central Intelligen­ce” was a rollicking, The Rock-starring spin on spy movies.

There is a certain comfort-food element at play here, for sure, and if what you crave is Johnson getting down and dirty and heroically hurling himself across improbable distances to save civilians — knock yourself out. But I’m voting Campbell for MVP of this one. As Will’s steelnerve­d spouse, she shepherds their two kids through industrial hellscapes and plummeting elevators, even wobbling across a single wooden plank, in heeled boots, to save her daughter from a fiery pit.

What strikes me as the clunkiest metaphor in “Skyscraper” is the building’s titular pearl. A giant sphere delicately placed atop the structure’s spires, it’s described to Will by its creator as a space whose interior can morph into literally any environmen­t via digital tech. Yet later, we find ourselves there in a hallof-mirrors chase scene out of any number of older, better movies. All that money and possibilit­y, and yet here we still are, trapped in an endless cycle of clichés.

 ??  ?? Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson scales new lows in his summer flick.
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson scales new lows in his summer flick.
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