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*** Official THE INTERNATIONAL Review Thread

post #1 of 3
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Strange things are afoot when people who dig too deeply into the affairs of The International Bank of Business and Credit (IBBC) end up dying. A foreign law enforcement officer with a questionable history, Louis Salenger, is on the case, and gets caught up in the middle of piecing together the murder of a US law enforcement officer investigating the IBBC after finding someone willing to talk about the IBBC's money laundering schemes for the corrupt, as well as providing arms and other aid to those willing to pay to usurp power by show of force in countries around the world.

I found the first third of this film to be a bit on the plodding side of things, mainly due to the CSI nature of how leads are found that push the plot along (probably my issue from years of watching too many episodes of CSI on TV), and how little we know of the protagonists (Louis, played by Clive Owen, and Ellie, played by Naomi Watts, which doesn't quite give the audience a hook into the film), but the middle section was pretty intense, though the final act sort of peters out. But I did like some of the shots that director Tykwer composed, but the film felt long to me, and if tightened up a bit, it could have been a better film-going experience. I'm still a fan of Tykwer's, though. I don't mind cursing, but the cursing in this film felt "off" to me, it was like, well it's going to be R rated, so let's toss in some curse words.

I give it 2.75 stars, or a grade of B-.

Gear mentioned in this thread:

The International [Blu-ray]
post #2 of 3

re: *** Official THE INTERNATIONAL Review Thread

What I liked best about The International was Tykwer's sense of locations and how to work them. He makes some of the best uses of international locales that I've seen in a studio picture in years (even better, for my taste, than the Bourne films). Berlin, Istanbul, Milan and New York are the major places. The Milan sequence is especially impressive.

The sequence involving the Guggenheim Museum easily outdoes Men in Black as the cleverest use of that space in a movie. And it's not just a random spot, because the script establishes earlier that a certain character likes to have his clandestine meetings in museums. Tykwer's inventive enough to use the surrounding environment as well. Not many people realize that, if you exit the Guggenheim, cross Fifth Ave. and hop the wall, you're suddenly confronted by a huge lake known as the Reservoir. But Tykwer sets a scene there, and it's a good one.

I didn't have as much trouble getting into the film as Patrick, but that's probably because Clive Owen always grabs my attention and holds it. He's playing another of the deeply flawed heroes to which he seems to be attracted, and when people tell his character that he's in way over his head, they're right.
post #3 of 3

Re: *** Official THE INTERNATIONAL Review Thread

This thread is now the Official Review Thread for "The International". Please post all HTF member reviews in this thread.

Any other comments, links to other reviews, or discussion items will be deleted from this thread without warning!

If you need to discuss those type of issues then I have designated an Official Discussion Thread.



Crawdaddy
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Gear mentioned in this thread:

The International [Blu-ray]
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