Point Break Review by Ryan Midnight (3.5 Stars) | MatchFlick
Left Header Right Header
Header 3a   Header Right End A Header Right End B Space
Header Left 3b
Movie Reviews Columns Now on DVD Now Playing News
FREE Membership Member Login About MatchFlick  FAQ's MatchFlick Friday
Steal of the Day
National Lampoon's Vacation:20th Ann Ed./National Lampoon's European Vac DV
$14.97
$7.25
The Steal of the Day is offered by MatchFlick's DVD partner, FamilyVideo.com.


 

Member Login  [help]
 
 
 
 
 
Membership
 Join for FREE
 FAQs
 About MatchFlick
 Privacy Policy
Popular Movies  [more]
 Fight Club
 Pulp Fiction
 Eternal Sunshine
Popular People  [more]
 Johnny Depp
 Tom Hanks
 Natalie Portman
Member Trends
 Horror Club
 Reviewer Stats
 Exclusive Interviews
Movie News
 Current News
 News Archives
Message Board
 Go To The Forum
Columns   [more]
 Mean Teen Wrecki...
 It's Good To Be ...
 Come Along With ...
 Obama Era May Pr...
 COLUMNS ARCHIVES
Contests
 GUESS THAT SCENE
Syndication
 RSS FEEDS
  
MatchFlick Member Reviews
Point Break
3 reviews

review this movie

read all reviews

Movie Details

All Movie Info

Directed By
Kathryn Bigelow

Written By:
W. Peter Iliff

Cast:
Patrick Swayze, Keanu Reeves, Gary Busey, Lori Petty, John C. McGinley, Chris Pederson, Bojesse Christopher, Daniel Beer, Sydney Walsh, Vincent Klyn, James LeGros, John Philbin, Julian Reyes, Tom Sizemore

Buy on DVD
 
 
Point Break (1991)
email this review to a friend

Movie Review by Ryan Midnight
November 25th, 2006

For several years now, the Ex-Presidents have been robbing banks along southern California. FBI Agent Pappas (Gary Busey) has a wild theory that the bank robbers are actually surfers, and enlists his young, hot-headed partner Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves) to go undercover as a surfer to see what he can figure out. His path quickly crosses with a local surfer, Bodhi (Patrick Swayze), a zen-like adrenaline junkie. Utah is soon taken under Bodhi's wing, and together with his surf buddies, take to the land, sea and air in search of the next rush.

Meanwhile, Utah has met and fallen in love with Tyler (Lori Petty) and ex-girlfriend of Bodhi. It is this personal connection that is Utah's downfall. Utah's investigation brings him to the conclusion that Bodhi and his friends are in fact the Ex-Presidents, and it is only then that Bodhi makes a psychotic move to kidnap Tyler and forces Utah to join his gang on the next heist!

The notion of "extreme sports" was just starting to creep into the national mind when this film splashed down in the summer of 1991, which captures the excitement of these events with a vigorous death-grip. Director Kathryn Bigelow, who proves wholeheartedly here that women can also bring action to the screen, uses point-of-view camera work to bring the viewer straight into the strange and heart-pumping world that is introduced here. From the foaming blue waves of SoCal to a magnificent and beautiful skydiving sequence, the viewer is right there with the characters. Bigelow also brings this same up-close-and-personal style into the bank robbing sequences, putting the viewer right in the middle of the danger. She would later go on to perfect this style in her 1995 success, STRANGE DAYS.

Keanu Reeves, as Johnny Utah, helps to dig himself into the surfer stereotype that would plague his early career. Here, he is still a weak in the acting department, and resorts to long gazes and clenched teeth to get the characters moods across. Reeves, and more importantly the character of Utah, does not come off as an FBI agent well, and although it is a minor point, it is a subconscious infiltration that brings the film out of the real world and into fantasy action land. Patrick Swayze, as Bodhi, brings a calm and yin-yang opposite to the screen. He has both a physical and mental presence that commands attention, which makes his philosophical ramblings throughout the film not only plausible but believable.

POINT BREAK is one of those films that can only be made, and more specifically made well, at the time when it was released. America was coming out of the muscle-bound 80's action films, and starting to look for something more sleek, while the energy of X-Games style events were starting to make it into mainstream media and grabbing attention of those unfamiliar with them. This is a marriage of those interests, and it serves as a basis upon which action films of the 90's were made, both in style and content. It is hard to imagine that this film is already 90's nostalgia, but alas it is, and as such is a worthwhile trip back in time to an age where awesome action films could be made without the crutch of CGI.

email this review to a friend

Comment on this Review:

Sorry, you must be a member to add comments to reviews.

Join or Login.


Subscribe to MatchFlick Movie Reviews through RSS



  RSS | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | About MatchFlick® | Press | Contact Us | FAQs
Partnership and Advertising Opportunities | Movie Database | Merchandise

©2004-2009 MatchFlick®. All rights reserved.
©MOVIE IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED AND THE PROPERTY OF THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS