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Mercury Rising

Mercury Rising

List Price: $12.98
Your Price: $11.68
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: another boring movie
Review: The director has wasted an interesting story and the film is simply boring. Everything is expected. Not worth for wasting your time to watch it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Silly, contrived, low budget parody of the genre.
Review: Mercury rising hooks you with an interesting premise... Disabled boy has incredible ability to read top secret code effortlessly, putting government officials in difficult position and leaving boy vulnerable to attack, protected only by tough but sensitive cop. The foundation is quickly laid for chase scenes, double-crossings, and a whole host of other relatively predictable, but entertaining FBI/CIA/police/top secret facility "everyone you thought was a good-guy turns bad when the heat's on and it's up to the hero to save the innocent boy/girl/world" suspense tricks of the type you expect in a modern action thriller, but enjoy even though you expect them, because you didn't really rent this for intellectual stimulation anyway, did you?. Of course not, and as Sunday night purchasers of an easy-watch flick, we don't mind suspending reality just a little bit for effect.

What we do mind, however, is suspending any semblence of intelligent thought. We do mind taking the time to drive to the video store, shell out four bucks, make popcorn and settle into our easy chair, only to be left at the end of an hour (which is all I could take before pressing the eject button) feeling that the fact that this movie attracted a large box office reflects somewhat sadly on the prospects for the human race. Not exactly chicken soup for the Sunday night blahs. To add insult to injury, we have to go out of our way to return the movie on Monday. We can't just clobber it with a hammer.

The problem with Mercury Rising is that there are so many instances of the utterly ridiculous that the suspense is lost, and the movie becomes little more than a thin parody of its own genre. At times you wonder of you're watching Bruce Willis or Leslie Neilson.

What are we to make, for instance, of the autistic boy's complete lack of friends, relatives, neighbors, child care workers, teachers, or anyone else who takes the slightest interest in his welfare? Who can expect us to believe that his parents are his only link to the world, and that when they are gunned down in cold blood, the tough but soft-hearted cop (Willis) is the only one who cares? How can we accept that the beaureucrat in charge of America's security (Baldwin) could ever conceive of working with the two bumbling oafs who purportedly came up with the top secret code in the first place? How can we believe that the gunman in charge of exterminating anyone and everyone who knows about the code leak would ply his trade with an eighteen inch gun/silencer combination on crowded city streets in broad daylight? What are we to make of Willis, whose mission is protection of the boy, leaving the child in a crowded cafe, under the custody of a woman whom he has never met? And are we really to believe any sensible woman would take charge of a stranger's child, let alone an autistic child?

As if the introduction of this stranger into the plot isn't laughable enough, the director makes it completely ludicrous by dragging up the overused "I've only met you once but that gives me the right to knock on your door at three-a.m. because you're a softie and I'm really desparate for a place to sleep and I promise I won't rape you" trick. Hilariously, the woman opens the door. Even more hilariously, she believes Willis when he tells her that he is an FBI agent, but that he has nowhere else in the world to turn. That's right. No friends. No relatives. No hotels. No motels. No nothing. It's a very strange world in the universe of low budget film making. Good thing he met her yesterday, otherwise he'd just have to camp in the park, or sleep in the car.

Which Willis did the day before, by the way. Very tired from running around all day with an autistic kid. Just parked and dozed off while the kid sat there beside him. Slept through the night. Slept through sunrise. Slept through rush hour traffic. Slept through the kid opening the door and walking out. Pretty sound sleeper for a cop protecting a kid from assassins, I'd say.

No problem, though, because he woke up and found the kid five minutes later wandering just a few blocks away. Kid hops out of car while cop sleeps. Cop awakes in a panic, but finds kid strolling down the street safe and sound. That's about the tautest suspense scene you'll find in Mercury Rising.

At every turn, overused gimmicks and silly contrivances wreak havoc with the plot. Take for instance, the events in the hospital where the boy is taken for examination after his parents are shot. Strap him to the bed, why don't we? That's always therapeautic for an autistic child after his parents have been shot. Good idea, let's just strap him to the bed, and leave him alone for the night. And by the way, let's make sure we don't put any blankets on him. And since nobody cares about him, we can certainly believe that the nurse on duty doesn't know his parents have been shot. Or did she forget that when his "parents" requested a transfer to another floor? But Bruce doesn't forget. No sir. Our hero puts two and two together in a flash. He knows that dead parents can't request a transfer, and smells something fishy. Rightly so. He rushes to the X-ray floor, just in time (of course) to find our gunman about to shoot the boy. Say, why is it that gunmen always have to request a transfer and call off the security guards. before they shoot someone in a hospital. Is that hospital protocol? I bet it's part of nurse training, learning to say "Sorry sir, you can't shoot that patient. He hasn't been transferred yet, and his security guards haven't been called off. Come back tomorrow. No doubt you'll find him in X-ray, no guards, no staff. It's nice and quiet down there. You can shoot him then. But be sure to come exactly at three o'clock, because the action hero is due to make is rounds at three-o-five. Of course if you come early, that's your perogative. But if you come early, you won't be allowed to shoot. You'll just be allowed to transfer the patient around the hospital until the action hero turns up."

But the comedy isn't limited to the script. It's right there in the action scenes too. Take for instance the foot chase scene in which our hero tries to apprehend the gunman who's just shot the computer programmer in cold blood. As the gunman shoots at Willis, Willis, ever the community-minded cop, turns to a crowded staircase and yells "down". Instantly, the entire crowd stops and, as one, drops to its knees. No panic, no pushing, no movement. Only a hundred dollar budget for fill-ins and a scene shot in ten minutes. Done. Onto the next. Let's get the gunman shooting at the hero now. But let's create some confusion and suspense. Hmm, what could we do... Think... Think... I know! I have a terrific idea that's never been done before. How about we have some tourists just walk out innocently between the gunman and the hero, blocking the shot. Now gunman, you look stupid and confounded. Wave your gun around as if you're trying to get a clear shot past the innocent tourists. Good. Now panic-stricken crowd, you just stay frozen. Now tourists, you just walk out here, about a dozen of you. Don't take any notice of the guns or the panic-stricken crowd. You're Chinese, remember? You just think it's part of American culture. Snap pictures, OK, and talk a lot. Let's get the girls in front here. OK. Ready... Roll-em! That's a wrap.

The only rise you will get out of Mercury Rising is your blood pressure, if you can endure it. Willis was great in Die Hard (the original) and has steadily gone downhill since

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Ok movie to rent
Review: Too unbelievable and predictable. Not too suspenseful either

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The normal action movie for Bruce Willis Good
Review: I liked the movie and I take it for what it was made for,just you'r regular action movie. It's made to enjoy, not to take to heart and does't have to be totally believable.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Average to disappointing.....
Review: I saw this film as a rental and thought it was average at best. The plot was transparent - and has anyone else had enough of Bruce Willis as the renegade cop? Baldwin was not compelling as the villian and there was a weak supporting cast. I thought they took a potentially interesting story and did very little with it. Rent it when everything else is out....

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Fell short of it's potential, but entertaining.
Review: Willis's character is interesting as a FBI agent haunted by past mistakes, and Baldwin makes a credible bad guy, but the usual Hollywood lust for blood stretch the viewers ability to suspend disbelief. The plot was compelling, if you like the "Conspiracy Theory" genre but, without giving away the plot, there were some events that did not seem reasonable given the circumstances. If the producers could have focused on the characters and plot a little more, and avoided shooting people at every opportunity, this could have been a great movie.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The mercury steadily rises in Mercury Rising
Review: I can't believe that "Mercury Rising" isn't more popular of a movie. A 9 year old autistic boy cracks the national security code that everybody thought was impossible to break. Art (Bruce Willis) takes it upon himself to protect the kid from some government officials who want the boy dead.

There might be some minor gaps in the storyline of "Mercury Rising," but nothing that does anything to hurt the movie in my opinion. This movie shows how great of an actor Bruce Willis really is and the boy does a great job too. The effects are also well done and the movie has good suspense.

If you like good suspense movies, I recommend getting "Mercury Rising."

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: IQ Falling
Review: This one could easily serve as Exhibit B in any indictment of knee-jerk Hollywood anti-Americanism. Exhibit A would have to be a better film.

The premise concerns an autistic child who is able to sightread extremely high-order classified ciphers. He's accomplished exactly that with the National Security Agency's latest version, which he's accessed through one of the lamest plot twists imaginable. (They've placed it in a puzzle magazine to beta-test it--no, I'm not making this up.)

So great -- the NSA hires the kid and turns him loose on Chinese, French, and other unfriendly ciphers, right? No they do not. Wake up -- this is Hollywood. They send goons out to kill him, which is where Bruce Willis, playing a conflicted law-enforcement officer of uncertain antecendents, comes to the rescue. From there on it's the standard huggermugger--unnecessary hairbreadth escapes, elite assassins who turn dopey at the most convenient moment, all-but-omniscient villains who can't see the obvious trap at the climax, etc.

The acting was phoned in. Willis can do many things well, but he can't do conflicted. For some peculiar reason, the guy who fed Buscemi into the wood chipper in "Fargo" has his hair dyed black in this one. All traces of quirkiness evident in his performance for the Coens has vanished here.

The sole exception to the overall blandness is provided by the Bloviator himself, Alec Baldwin. Perhaps the film's major offense is the implication that whole scheme is being carried out in support of Iraqi agents working against Saddam. (Kind of getting a jump on Fatboy Moore here.) Baldwin repeats this contention several times during the film, very impressively, too. With conviction, you might say.

All in all, this is a film that makes "Enemy of the State" look good. A clearer recommendation I cannot provide.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It grabbed me from the beginning...
Review: Although in my opinion, the role of Baldwin is a waste of time and possibly money, but the idea is interesting, and the growing bond between Willis and the boy gets you close to the screen. If you are OK with Bruce Willis acting skills, you have to see this one.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: LOW BLOOD PRESSURE
Review: Bruce Willis returns in the role of a loose cannon, demoted by the FBI after a hostage situation goes tragically awry. Willis is great in these kind of roles, eliciting both a strong macho appearance, but with an inner sensitivity that evades other actors. Willis' scenes with Miko Hughes as the autistic Simon are the highlights of the film, as is the supporting performances by Chi McBride as Willis' buddy and Kim Dickens as a young lady who gets involved in the situation. Alec Baldwin is smarmy again as the villainous NSA director. The main problem I found with this picture is director Harold Becker's meandering pacing and inability to maintain a tight level of suspense. The climax is great, but wading through some really slow scenes hurts it overall.
Not a great film, but a good one.


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