Keenen Ivory Wayans, Jill Hennessy, Jon Voight, Robert
Culp, Paul Sorvino. (R, 99 min.)
Most Wanted has the feel -- and I mean this as a compliment -- of having been written
by a committee of 12-year-old boys. Writer and star Wayans is clearly a stone devotee
of the school of action-espionage cinema characterized by rogue spy agencies, enigmatically
code-named conspiracies, exotic weaponry, and jumpsuit-intensive haberdashery. Blessedly,
though, his appreciation seems to focus on the superficial, relatively innocent pleasures
of derring-do, cool stunts, and convoluted narrative, not the humorless macho-gothic
sensibilities of most recent Seagal and Van Damme vehicles. Wayans plays James Dunn,
a Marine sharpshooter who gets recruited for an officially unsanctioned rub-out of
a chemical weapons dealer. The hit, staged at a ceremony attended by the President's
wife, goes awry when the First Lady is accidentally (?) killed instead. Dunn quickly
learns that he's been set up as the patsy as part of a plot to suppress a scandal
involving medical experiments on American soldiers. While on the lam, Dunn teams
up with a doctor (Hennessy) whose videotape of the crime scene could help exonerate
him. Director Hogan, who also made last year's campily enjoyable Pamela Anderson
Lee hoot, Barb Wire, demonstrates a surprising flair for the kinetic language of
action moviemaking. Though this is by no stretch another A Bullet in the Head, fans
of John Woo should at least salute Hogan's ability to create excitement with creative
blocking and camera positioning, not gimmicky editing, as well as his flair for turning
patently ridiculous concepts into moments of visual grandeur. But Wayans is the meal
ticket here. With his buff physique, irreverent wit, and mechanical omnicompetence
(in just over 90 minutes he displays mastery of electronics, riflery, martial arts,
WestLaw database searches, and parachuting), he's every pubescent male's dream alter
ego. Equally nifty is his script, basically a fan-designed action-movie theme park,
in which enjoyably cartoonish characters are put through their paces for an audience
that's let in on the joke from the get-go. Voight, who seems to have been liberated
as an actor by the loss of his cherubic good looks, has a gleeful romp as the creepy
Army general who's framing Dunn. Sorvino, as a morally ambiguous CIA official (as
if there were any other kind) adds sly, understated counterpart to the testosterone-steeped
madness churning around him. At the risk of clogging the Chronicle's server with
hate e-mail from outraged actionoids, I'll argue that the modern action movie has
lapsed into a persistent vegetative state and that its best hope for revival (barring
the unlikely prospect of a massive transfusion of originality) is the approach taken
by Most Wanted: playing it light, ironic, and basically for laughs.
3.0 stars (R.S.)
Full Length Reviews
Most Wanted 
Most Wanted 
Capsule Reviews
Most Wanted 
Other Films by David Hogan
Barb Wire 
Film Vault Suggested Links
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