San Francisco Chronicle

New director forgot thrills in his thriller

- By Katie Walsh

Gary Dourdan deserves better. The former “CSI” star, also known for “Alien: Resurrecti­on,” has a strong screen presence that suggests something deeper beneath the surface. Unfortunat­ely, his star turn in the abduction thriller “Redemption Day,” which begins streaming on demand Tuesday, Jan. 12, and is the feature directoria­l debut of Moroccan producer Hicham Hajji, is not the tool to excavate that.

Although Hajji has assembled an impressive supporting cast, including Andy Garcia, Martin Donovan, Ernie Hudson and Canadian actress Serinda Swan, the script by Hajji, Sam Chouia and Lemore Syvan is dreadfully dull and underdevel­oped, ridden with bland, limply delivered dialogue. There’s not a thrill to be found in this ostensible thriller, a rote kidnapping exercise taped together with digital blood spatter and an overly dramatic score, vaguely gesturing at global crises from five years ago.

Dourdan is Brad Paxton, a former Marine haunted by nightmares of an aid mission gone awry in Syria. His wife, Kate ( Swan), is an archaeolog­ist who has recently discovered an ancient city under the Moroccan desert she’s hoping will reveal important discoverie­s about the origins of human life. Brad encourages Kate to make the trip, but it’s not 24 hours before he receives the call that she’s been abducted by a FrenchAlge­rian terrorist inspired by the Islamic State, Jaafar El Hadi ( Samy Naceri), after wandering across the Algerian border. For Brad, a hostage negotiator, that means it’s time to mount up and rescue his wife.

It’s your basic savethegir­l story, with all the obstacles and allies along the way you might expect, and the sheen of a cheapie directtovi­deo action flick. The combat sequences have all the intrigue of watching someone else play “Call of Duty,” and the few fight scenes are profoundly leaden. Even the tech dude who should be the comic relief never delivers any jokes ( aside from referring to himself as “XL Neo”). Plus, the wildly inconsiste­nt production values from scene to scene make it feel like two completely different movies. There are computeren­hanced explosions, as well as many, many, long, extensive drone shots of various vehicles driving across the desert, but the Situation Room looks like they stole a shot in the corner of a midbudget hotel business center, and then doubled that for the press briefing set.

You keep waiting for a twist that

never comes, or something more to be revealed ( and there are opportunit­ies). But no, it’s just that straightfo­rward the whole way through. Kidnapping, ransom, videos of bloodied hostages quaking before swords, Navy SEALs shooting the place up, etc. There’s some opaque discussion about the influence of the oil lobby on the rescue, as the cigarchomp­ing American ambassador ( Garcia) and a sniveling diplomat of sorts ( Donovan) hesitate to act because it might help some kind of oil deal. It’s never quite explained, despite opening title cards proclaimin­g the power and importance of oil, and an inexplicab­le 11thhour appearance from a Foghorn

Leghornacc­ented oil lobbyist in full Colonel Sanders getup who confirms their undue influence.

It’s easy to harp on the production issues that plague “Redemption Day” because there’s not much else to think about with a story this flat. There are no character arcs for these heroes. They act as you expect them to, leaving you to wonder if their significan­t personal growth happened before the events depicted in the film. Even the title is confoundin­g: “Redemption Day”? For whom? For what? Those are the existentia­l questions you might be asking yourself about this film as the credits roll.

 ?? Saban Films ?? Gary Dourdan’s strong screen presence can’t save “Redemption Day,” which is flawed on many levels.
Saban Films Gary Dourdan’s strong screen presence can’t save “Redemption Day,” which is flawed on many levels.

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