一线声机的影评,英文

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一线声机的影评,英文
一线声机的影评,英文

一线声机的影评,英文
"Cellular" has the setup for a solid straight-ahead thriller:A kidnap victim who does not know where she is being held phones a total stranger who must then stay connected on his cell phone to find her before she is killed.Joel Schumacher scored earlier with a similarly phone-themed Larry Cohen story,"Phone Booth." As executed by tone-deaf director David R.Ellis,however,"Cellular" becomes an unintentionally hilarious cousin to Brian de Palma's "Raising Cain" and "Snake Eyes."
Ellis seems to have unwittingly spliced together two different films with mismatched tones:Kim Basinger as the kidnapee and Jason Statham as the kidnapper occupy the deadly-serious,straight-to-video thriller half,while Chris Evans as the rescuer and William H.Macy as a police officer seem to be in a "Saturday Night Live"-alum action comedy.Nowhere else is the disjointedness in tone more apparent than when Basinger and Evans's performances are placed side-by-side during their conversations:The scenes keep cutting between an overwrought Basinger wringing out every drop of melodrama,while a blissfully inept Evans seems to be channeling a cross between Chris Kattan/Jimmy Fallon and Ben Affleck/Keanu Reeves.
Meanwhile,Ellis pulls out tricks intended to generate thrills and surprises.He throws in out-of-nowhere "shocks," a la "Final Destination"; he throws in flashbacks; he throws in a gun-blazing Macy in Jerry Bruckheimer action-hero slo-mo; and yet,Ellis has no handle on staging any of them competently.Case in point:"Cellular" is the proud owner of one of the most ineptly scored chase sequences ever,as if Ellis simply heard a snippet of the song's lyrics ("...where you gonna run to?") literally and paid no attention to the inappropriateness of the accompanying music (which just bop,bop,bops along).(The song is even reprised during the closing credits,which itself is misbegotten in conception.)
And yet,for all of its failures as art,"Cellular" is always entertaining for those very same faults