Action
Point **
Dir: Tim Kirkby. With: Johnny Knoxville, Dan Bakkedahl, Chris
Pontius, Eleanor Worthington-Cox. 85 mins. Cert: 15
Still no sign of that Adventureland
sequel, but this week brings us a puzzling film in which 47-year-old Johnny
Knoxville, in the guise of a renegade theme-park operator, gets to rag on
millennials for their observance of basic health-and-safety codes. Cinema, like
life, is rarely fair. If Knoxville’s Jackass
movies were, for better and frequently worse, everything they set out to be, Action Point looks very much like the
kind of PG-13 rated compromise – gooey teen coming-of-ager, with stunts
attached – which studio Paramount might have imposed on those doofi had
then-hot producer-director Spike Jonze not had their back. Watching it is like
travelling through a wormhole to a slightly crummier version of 2004.
The sense of a fading star looking over a repeatedly
dislocated shoulder is underlined by the new film’s framing. Bookends find
Knoxville, in Bad Grandpa latex, reminiscing
with a grandchild about the late Seventies heyday in which his D.C. transformed
the fortunes of a beat-up backwoods attraction by taking the speed limiters off
the rides. The upshot is an erratic run of skits, assembled with neither rhyme
nor reason, in which Knoxville and loyal second Chris Pontius are knocked over,
or have live squirrels introduced to their nethers, or chuckle at the sight of
copulating dogs. Some of these – like an incident involving a trebuchet – are
just blunt enough to force out a fleeting snicker; most yield frowns or uneasy grimaces.
The surprise is that such a reactionary artefact should be
credited to a director best associated with progressive British comedy. Tim
Kirkby (Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle,
Fleabag) appears to have chiefly
asserted himself by getting Sham 69 and The Undertones onto the soundtrack,
thereby scattering traces of punk attitude amid the product placement and
flagrantly insincere father-daughter bonding. Elsewhere, evidence suggests he
could only go along with some questionable executive-level decisions, and then
the ageing yahoos making mildly merry while trashing his set. Not good for
much, all told, but there may be a lesson in here about the extent to which
rowdy rabbles can ever be successfully appeased.
Action Point opens in selected cinemas from tomorrow.
No comments:
Post a Comment