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Skyscraper Movie Review: Dizzying Digital mayhem

Updated on: 20 July,2018 03:19 PM IST  | 
Johnson Thomas | mailbag@mid-day.com

Even with a prosthetic leg, Dwayne Johnson stands tall. This is pure digital mayhem and it's quite enjoyable too!

Skyscraper Movie Review: Dizzying Digital mayhem

Skyscraper movie poster. Pic Courtesy/Skyscraper Official Twitter account

Skyscraper
U/A; Action, Crime, Drama
Director: Rawson Thurber
Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Neve Campbell, Noah Taylor, Chin Han, Roland Møller, Byron Mann, Pablo Schreiber, Hannah Quinlivan
Rating: Ratings


A visually attractive though largely mindless cross between "Die Hard" and "The Towering Inferno," this disaster movie experience is engaging enough to provide a much-needed diversion. Former FBI Hostage Rescue Team leader and U.S. war veteran Will Ford(Dwayne Johnson) after a disastrous appendage wrecking experience, has moved on to assessing security for skyscrapers. He has just rated the Tallest structure in the world, 220 plus storey building, conceived and built by Zhao Long Zhi(Chin Han) in Hong Kong, as safe when fire breaks out. Finding his family trapped in the blaze, he sets out to rescue them. But there's something far more sinister going on here and he has to battle against the odds (even gravity) if he wants to keep his family, a wife (Neve Campbell) and twins (McKenna Grace and Noah Cottrell) alive and together.


Watch the trailer of Skyscraper:


In one of it's numerous gravity-defying illusions, the film has the hulking one time WWF wrestler-turned-actor hanging from a sidebar of the 200th floor (possibly. I actually lost count of that) of the soaring building by only his left hand while in the background, illuminated by the deadly blaze that's raging all around him is the mammoth tower that stands taller than any other structure around. You know the laws of physics state it as an impossibility but yet you want to believe he did it.

Writer/director Rawson Marshall Thurber has Johnson attempting many more such impossibilities before the rescue is completed successfully. The good thing here is that he gets us empathising with Will and his connectedness with his family before he lets loose on the fantastic visual FX. While bravery and resilience get their due, loss of lives becomes collateral damage and conscienceless. But then that's the villain Kores Botha's (Roland Møller) work. And we don't quite get what his reasons for evil are.

There's guilty pleasure to be had in the dizzying death-defying acrobatics on display here even though the connectedness in between the action is quite problematic. Each new obstacle coming his way presents an incrementally greater challenge and Johnson is more than equal to the task. From his recent filmography and his history with the WWF we have come to believe in his invincibility. Even with a prosthetic leg, Johnson stands tall. This is pure digital mayhem and its quite enjoyable too!

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