Battleship (12A)

Film

War films

Taylor Kitsch, left, in Battleship

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>2/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Wed Apr 11 2012

To think this started life as a game of detection you could play with pencils and paper, trying to guess where each other’s naval forces were secretly lurking on a hand-drawn grid. Nowadays, the same basic principles are played out on your tablets and smartphones, though there’s one common factor – a distinct lack of aliens.

That’s now been rectified, as this pixellated extravaganza pits combined US and Japanese seagoing forces against powerful extraterrestrial foes, who look suspiciously like kiddies’ action figures, presumably because the same toy company which has the rights to the ‘Battleship’ game also brought you the ‘Transformers’ range. Essentially, then, we’re talking a marketing exercise as much as a movie.

And not much of a movie either. Predictably big on military hardware, explosions, explosions and, yes, more explosions, its appeal would seem largely limited to little boys who like playing with plastic figures and detachable accessories, an age group forbidden from seeing it by the 12A certification.

Taylor ‘John Carter’ Kitsch confirms that he lacks leading-man charisma as Alex, a youthful rapscallion who shows his mettle when he joins the navy, taking on the invaders so Admiral Shane (Liam Neeson, not over-taxed) will let him marry his blonde bombshell daughter, Samantha (Brooklyn Decker). Oh yeah, and he might save the world while he’s at it.

The action delivers a certain amount of mass destruction – did we mention the explosions? – but tends to assume the viewer has a four-second attention span, since the aliens seem all-powerful one minute, laughably vulnerable the next. This dampens any prospect of excitement, and though director Peter Berg (‘Hancock’, ‘The Kingdom’) seems to have played his most spectacular cards too early, the movie rallies in a final reel of such outrageous, shameless, unrepentant (not to say explosive) idiocy that one can’t help but smile.Briefly.

Elsewhere pop foxtress Rihanna gets little to do in a Lt Uhuru-type supporting slot; Hamish Linklater graduates from Miranda July’s indie quirkfest ‘The Future’ to prosper in the beardy/speccy/scientist geek role; while otherwise supercool Japanese actor Tadanobu Asano seriously dents his arthouse cred in a clunky turn as Kitsch’s rival-turned-pal. Guess his presence takes care of the Asian market, though, in a package which never, ever lets you forget its brand-led priorities. Still, when the name of the toy company is above the title on the poster, you can’t say you weren’t given fair warning.

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Release details

Rated:

12A

UK release:

Wed Apr 11 2012

Duration:

131 mins

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (15 ratings)
  • Watchable-but only barely

    Ric Wed Apr 18 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • I went in with low expectations thanks to the trailer and was pleasantly surprised. Yes it is stupid (very!) and yes it is loud (very!) but it is fun. The film doesn't take itself seriously and made me laugh quite a few times (due to intentional and unintentional bits). What more could a person expect from a film based on such a straight-forward board game? If you liked Independence Day but wished it was just a little bit more stupid then Battleship is for you!

    Marsellus Tue Apr 17 2012
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Paul has a valid excuse for seeing it and not liking it. All others...what were you expecting please? The trailer, tital and "from Harisbo" made it PERFECTLY clear what you were going to get....and I'm a proud "knucklehead" as I found it really rather enjoyable. Nothing new, impressive effects, brisk pace...you knew the score with it, stop winging! 6+/10

    scrumpyjack Mon Apr 16 2012
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  • I went to see it with my teenage daughter on the strength of it having Rihanna in it. The oblique references to Pearl Harbour went over her head. It's a film for young boys and delivers the sort of action they enjoy. Not worth analysing as it is just a basic cgi action film with the usual formula. Rihanna did not shine and my daughter thought she looked ugly, so there you go.

    Paul Mon Apr 16 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Kitsch reflects the high quality of the movie--he accused the philippine customs authorities of trying to force a bribe out of him at the Airport. The dumb arse was never in the philippines he was in Indonesia. A highly intelectual actor in a highly intelectual movie !!!!!!!!!

    jim Sat Apr 14 2012
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  • ANOTHER TURD WITH LIAM NEESON -this one takes on INDEPENDENCE DAY TOO ,

    miles Sat Apr 14 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • This is truly an awful film. Its a cliche heavy tub thumping mindless mess, When the trailers for this film first cam out I am sure it was advertised as being in 3D and some of the scenes in the original trailer didn't make it to the final cut. The default mode in the film is play it dumb, play it loud and have lots of explosions and join the mess together with lots of heavy metal music. I imagine the aim is to get teenage American's come out of the movie shouting USA and marching straight to the nearest navy recruitment office. Berg seems to have rounded up every war cliche he can and then found a few more for good measure. After about half of the film I gave up on the plot and started counting the cliches. My particular favourites were how they managed to get the Battleship into action and also how the last round from the last working turret provided the kill. Don't expect to be entertained more bludgened to death with explosions, very loud music and lots of cliches. Kitsch confirms the inkling from John Carter that he isn't leading man material and Rihanna joins a long list of singers who should forget about acting and stick to the day job. Just worth two stars if only for the audacity with all the cliches.

    Ian Sat Apr 14 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • Archgate: "Recommended for teenagers, knuckleheads and loose women." And you took time to go to the cinema and paid to see it. So which category do you fall into?

    Simon Fri Apr 13 2012
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  • The opening scene states clearly that this film is aimed directly between the eyes of the YouTube generation. Wafer thin plotting is replaced by taking a bit of every war film from the last 20 years and stitching it together liquorish. It's mildly entertaining for an adult .. but probably fantastic entertainment for 12-18 year olds. Japan/USA v N.Korea is the canvas with big ship guns as the explosive brushes. This is the biggest popcorner for the last 10 years. Recommended for teenagers, knuckleheads and loose women.

    ARCHGATE Thu Apr 12 2012
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  • Errrr, you do know what 12A means? It's been around for a decade now. No one is legally "forbidden from seeing it"!

    scrumpyjack Thu Apr 12 2012
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