Push Movie Review
Arts & Entertainment → Television / Movies
- Author Jj Jamson
- Published March 10, 2009
- Word count 407
Push was a movie that promised fast action from the start and looked to end even faster. No wonder it was a big mess.
The movie was about super humans with various powers that governments and criminal organizations around the world seek to control as weapons.
The story took place in Hong Kong where Nick (Chris Evans) and Cassie (Dakota Fanning) had to save Kira (Camilia Belle) from the Division, the branch of the US government that handles super humans. The storyline took the same string of chords from Heroes and the X-Men, but did not quite reach the same note.
It's not so much the acting, but the story telling was incoherent and filled with so much plot holes that movie goers are required to be familiar with the likes of Heroes and X-Men to make sense of the struggles. If we had to draw from outside the Push universe, then the movie is not good. There were too many loose ends.
Perhaps the biggest among the loose ends was toward the end when Nick somehow managed to beat Victor, a fully trained and well experienced field agent. Earlier in the movie, Victor totally wiped Nick and was on the verge of killing him. As far as we know, Nick did not undertake any training to improve his skills to exceed that of Victor by the end of the movie.
Also, was Kira an agent of the Division or not? She defeated an agent in hand-to-hand combat and she knew how to use a gun...
Another problem with Push was that at no point in time did I feel that the main characters were in danger. Maybe it's because I stopped caring.
If Push is to be remembered for anything at all, then it would be for two things: Dakota Fanning's acting and the Pop brothers, played by Kwan Fung Chi and Jackie Heung. Dakota outshined everybody and convincingly played a streetwise 13 year old girl, probably not seen since Jody Foster in a much darker movie, Taxi Driver.
Meanwhile, the Pop brothers could become a cult hit simply because they look funny when using their powers. I definitely see profile icons, screensavers, and windows background with these two.
All in all, I rate the movie 2 out of 5. It's not a complete disaster, but it's not worth the admission of a feature. Perhaps if you're local theaters have a great matinee price or just wait for rental.
The author is a web producer and writes freelance on various topics, including "geeky" fun stuff like Transformers movie action figures and, sometimes, more serious subjects, like finding online medical coding schools.
Article source: https://articlebiz.comRate article
Article comments
There are no posted comments.
Related articles
- The Evolution of Compact Cinema Cameras: From Studio Rigs to Agile Setups
- Mastering Camera Support: How Precision Fluid Heads Transform Cinematic Movement
- Color Reproduction and Skin Tones — The Real Challenge for Modern Cinema Lenses
- When Detail Becomes the Story: Macro Lenses in Narrative and Commercial Filmmaking
- “The Man of Steel’s Tragic Fall: The Life and Times of George Reeves.”
- “The Quiet Comeback: Brendan Fraser’s Journey from Stardom to Shadows and Back Again.”
- “Ashes of the Heart.”
- “Light, Time, and Suffering: The Cinematic Ordeal of The Revenant.”
- “Breaking the Frame: How Independent Cinema Redefined Hollywood from the Margins.”
- “The Elusive Muse: Greta Garbo and the Art of Disappearing.”
- “Dream Logic and Cinematic Reality.”
- “Glamour, Blood, and the Spotlight: Lana Turner, Johnny Stompanato, and Hollywood’s Most Notorious Scandal.”
- A Journey Across Europe: The Map That Leads to You 2025
- “Blood, Dust, and Honor: How “The Wild Bunch” Shattered the Western Myth.”
- “Dean Martin: From Small-Town Beginnings to Timeless Legend of Music and Film.”
- “Daniel Day-Lewis— Deep Immersion and Subtle Gesture in There Will Be Blood.”
- “Shadows of Youth: How The Graduate Still Echoes Across a Lifetime.”
- "Louise Brooks: The Icon Who Defied Hollywood."
- “Play It Again, World: Why Casablanca Still Speaks to Us All These Years Later.”
- “From Spotlight to Parliament: The Fearless Journey of Glenda Jackson.”
- “Drifting Rooms and Vanishing Faces: Confronting the Abyss in The Father.”
- Mastering Cinematic Camera Movement: The Art and Science of Fluid Heads
- "Grace Beyond Glamour: Audrey Hepburn's Timeless Reign in a World of Glitter and Excess."
- “The Relentless Ascent of Tom Cruise: Hollywood’s Tireless Risk-Taker.”
- “Shadows and Smoke: The Seductive Descent of Film Noir.”
- Indie Film Hack: How a Used Master Prime 50 mm Creates $1-Million Visuals
- “Godfather to Guardian: Al Pacino’s Journey to Redemption in Scent of a Woman.”
- “The Man of Steel’s Tragic Fall: The Life and Times of George Reeves.”
- “Shadowland: The Tragic Ordeal of Frances Farmer and the Machinery That Broke Her.”
- “Glenn Ford: Hollywood’s Reluctant Heartthrob Who Played by His Own Rules.”