The Guardian (USA)

The Bodyguard review – Whitney Houston showstoppe­r as resplenden­t as ever

- Peter Bradshaw

In all its irresistib­le absurdity, this colossal 90s studio movie and global smash – like Titanic, mocked by the critics and loved by the public – is revived for its 30th anniversar­y. Directed by Mick Jackson, written by Lawrence Kasdan and shot by Andrew Dunn, The Bodyguard does sag a bit here and there, and Kevin Costner’s relationsh­ip with the “cocky black chauffeur” character jars.

But there’s no doubting the powerhouse punch of Whitney Houston’s showcase musical numbers, especially her passionate, declamator­y cover version of I Will Always Love You, an originally a brisker and yet more downbeat country track written for Dolly Parton. Here, it’s radically reimagined – Houston and Costner even have a scene where they dance in a bar to the original version, and she comments on what a downer it is. And, of course, there is that outrageous big finish at the Academy Awards, where Houston, playing an Oscar nominee, is in danger of being assassinat­ed right then and there in front of the tuxedoed crowd, and only her gallant bodyguard-lover can save her.

It’s a hokey yet irresistib­le romantic fantasy template, recently given a makeover by Jed Mercurio in the BBC TV drama Bodyguard with Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes. Costner gives a stolid performanc­e as Frank Farmer, a Secret Service agent turned profession­al bodyguard haunted by his failure to protect Ronald Reagan from the 1981 assassinat­ion attempt on him. Houston plays Rachel Marron, a beautiful yet vulnerable singer and single mum who has recently made a break into movies, snagging an Oscar nomination for an acting performanc­e (we never see a clip of this imaginary film; the task of differenti­ating her fictional acting attempts from the real ones might have tested Houston severely). Rachel has a creepy and potentiall­y murderous stalker; she receives death threats, and Frank is called in as her bodyguard. It appears that the culprit has made it into her mansion and masturbate­d over her bed – a disturbing detail with a Silence of the Lambs tone that isn’t elaborated upon. Frank has to meet the various members of her spiky, rivalrous entourage, all tacitly offered up as potential “whodunnit” candidates.

Inevitably, after some meet-cute squabbling, Frank and Rachel fall in love, having gone on a date to see Kurosawa’s samurai bodyguard movie Yojimbo – the loose inspiratio­n for this film. (Rachel herself is no cinephile slouch, having based her new video on Fritz Lang’s Metropolis.) Stern, unsmiling Frank is the gallant protector of the glamorous yet fearful Rachel, and though Costner and Houston’s mutual performanc­es are a bit awkward, there is a kind of sweetness to their obvious incompatib­ility, in art as in life. The Bodyguard is still an innocent popcorn pleasure, all the way up to that overthe-top scene on Oscar night.

• The Bodyguard is released on 6 Nov in cinemas.

 ?? ?? Innocent popcorn pleasure … Whitney Houston in The Bodyguard. Photograph: Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy
Innocent popcorn pleasure … Whitney Houston in The Bodyguard. Photograph: Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy

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