Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Overlooked Movies: Sahara

This is a slightly revised review from 2005, but I think people are still overlooking the movie, if not hating it.  I liked it, though, as you'll see. 

This isn't the Sahara movie with Humphrey Bogart. I kind of like that one, too, but this one's nothing like that. 

There are more explosions in the first five minutes of this one than in anything else I've seen this year. I figure it might hold the record for most explosions ever, but I'm not sure. 

I am sure that it has just about everything you could want in an adventure movie. There's a fine cast, including the hot chick (Penelope Cruz), the high-spirited adventurer (Matthew McConaughey), the zany sidekick (Steve Zahn), despicable villain #1 (Lambert Wilson), despicable villain #2 (Glynn Thurman), the stalwart Old Man (William H. Macy), the other zany sidekick (Rainn Wilson). You have lost treasure, toxic poisoned wells, a Threat to the Entire World, a ticking clock, the flight of the phoenix, guys (and a gal) jumping onto a moving train from the backs of running camels, a Civil War ironclad in the African desert, a neat old car, and I'm sure I'm forgetting eight or ten other things. I didn't see a kitchen sink, but I got the feeling that any minute one could come flying onto the set. And explosions. Did I mention the explosions? 

I was curious about one thing. Was it possible that Penelope Cruz (who looks great on camelback, by the way, but then she always looks great: dressed up, disheveled, sheveled, robed, disrobed (but only down to a bikini in this movie) could turn in a performance (she plays a doctor for the World Health Organization) to equal that of Denise Richards as a nuclear physicist in The World is Not Enough? The answer is: Yes. I was absolutely convinced. Of course the members of the so-called Academy of Motion Pictures of Arts and Sciences, in their overweening envy will never nominate her for the Oscar she so richly deserves, just as they have denied Denise, not only for her performance in the above-mentioned James Bond movie but in the classic Wild Things

McConaughey and Zahn seem to be having a heck of a good time, as if they both know how outlandish the whole thing is and just don't care. Zahn's there to provide laughs, but he more than holds up his end in the action scenes. (There are hardly any other kinds of scenes in the movie.)

And McConaughey can deliver the required dialogue in just the right spirit. I found myself smiling along with him when the Old Man says, "You know I can't ask you and Al to do this alone," and McConaughey replies, "That's what makes it so good, Admiral. You don't have to." And of course in the next scene, he and Zahn are speeding away to take on hordes of bad guys all by themselves if need be.

So if you like the kind of Boys' Own Adventure movie that doesn't care in the least that it's totally preposterous, if you're willing to go along for the ride and the laughs, you should have a great time at Sahara. I did.  I found it all right, all right, all right.

15 comments:

RHovey, CA said...

Good post. I loved it, thought it was a hoot. Doesn't seem so long ago though - I hate how time flies in older age.

mybillcrider said...

I hate that, too, Roy.

August West said...

Great chemistry between all the actors. Loved it. I wished it had been a bigger hit. I would of loved to see these become a series of movies.
"What's a Panama?"

pattinase (abbott) said...

I don't think I even knew about this one. Must have been when MM was in his down period.

Tom Johnson said...

I have it on VHS and watch it every few of years. Lots of fun.

James Reasoner said...

I loved it. Been meaning to watch it again. All the bad publicity from Cussler hating it probably contributed to its not being a success.

mybillcrider said...

Maybe Cussler didn't think it captured the essence of his novel. Maybe he wanted CITIZEN KANE.

Don Coffin said...

Clive Cussler novels have essences?

Mike Stamm said...

I've never been able to read Clive Cussler's fiction--I'd put his writing on a par with Robert Ludlum and Dan Brown--but I *really* liked this movie. It's one of a number of films I can watch over and over again with the same pleasure. (And I would put Penelope Cruz up against Denise whosis any day of the week.)(Now *there's* a thought...) I could--albeit just barely--buy Ms. Cruz as a WHO doctor; I couldn't buy Denise as anything but a rogue cheerleader in ANYthing, ever.

mybillcrider said...

Will the persecution never end?

Gerard said...

Glad to see I'm not the only one who enjoyed this one. I'll watch most any film if Zahn is in it.

Jeff Meyerson said...

One of my favorite scenes in Treme was Zahn in Fats Domino's house trying to convince him to be in one of his recording projects.

Jackie watched this one fairly recently and liked it too.

Jeff

Jeff Meyerson said...

Sadly, Jackie doesn't recognize the many talents of Denise Richards either.

Vann said...

My teenage sons and I love this movie. We've seen it multiple times. It never gets old. Great lines, great soundtrack, good story.

lastromantic49 said...

I liked it too. But then, my movie going has a "just good fun" setting that most of the critics don't seem to have. I also read a lot of the Cussler books and enjoyed them. Same setting.