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Patrick Swayze

Point Break (2015): Like, Whoa!

POINT BREAK

I’m not a huge fan of remakes. I know I was in the minority, but we didn’t need a secondary version of?True Grit, and quite frankly, I never needed Andrew Garfield to reprise the role of Peter Parker. But I literally laughed out loud when I saw the news that?Point Break?(1991) was being remade. “Seriously?!” I asked. “How are they going to top Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze?”

pb2The truth is that they never could?top?them. While they did make more ($131 million) than their budget ($105 million), the film wasn’t well received by fans of the original or critics. Unfortunately, writer Kurt Wimmer (remember the Colin Farrell remake of?Total Recall) turned in a plot that ultimately hopes to dazzle us with director Ericson Core’s focus on amazing stunts and scenic views. Sure, Ray Winstone gets to play a Feebie, and Teresa Palmer shows up in the role Lori Petty nailed. But c’mon, are we blown away?

POINT BREAK

Not exactly. There’s some eco-warrior mumbo jumbo about revering nature and doing good to liberate people from their financial constraints and material cravings. It’s a loose plot point that allows the stunts – and visuals – to shine, but we’re never quite pulled in to the bromance between Bodhi (Edgar Ramirez) and FBI agent Johnny Utah (Luke Bracey). So, yes, it looks good, but no, it’s not the mind-blowing entertainment that the producers certainly hoped it would be. Still… there are four behind-the-scenes stunt shows. It took snowboarders, surfers, wing suit flyers, and more to capture everything on camera. It’s just too bad that the stunts might be the best part of the film, so you’ll have to decide if that’s the way you’re willing to roll.

Point Break (1991): One Last Ride #TBT

pointbreak1On Christmas 2015, a crime/action flick called?Point Break?exploded into theaters and … fizzled out. But what younger audiences may not know is that this film about globetrotting thrill seekers who also robbed banks is a remake of one of the best action/buddy films of all time from twenty-five years ago.

Twenty-five years ago, before?The Fast & The Furious?launched a franchise about friendships that crossed the line between the ‘good guys’ and ‘the bad guys’…

Twenty-five years ago, before Keanu Reaves was Neo, Jack Traven, or John Wick…

Twenty-five years ago, before director Kathryn Bigelow divorced her executive producer hubby James Cameron or?helmed?The Hurt Locker?or?Zero Dark Thirty…

Twenty-five years ago, before Patrick Swayze died of pancreatic cancer…

pointbreak2Rather than waste eight bucks on a film getting destroyed by critics, I thought I’d spend a couple of hours revisiting the original. Here,?freshly-minted FBI agent Johnny Utah (Reeves over the likes of Matthew Broderick, Johnny Depp, and Charlie Sheen) arrives in Los Angeles, much to the disappointment of his new boss, Ben Harp (John McGinley), and his new partner, Angelo Pappas (Gary Busey). But Utah buys into Pappas’ theory that a string of twenty-plus bank robberies are the work of a surfing crew, and he goes undercover as a wannabe surfer to infiltrate the gang.

Utah’s entry into the gang is Tyler Endicott (Orange is the New Black’s?Lori Petty), who teaches him how to surf and introduces him to Bodhi (Swayze), whose us-against-the-establishment mentality makes him a charismatic leader for the surfer/robbers who flock to him. Bodhi is the Robin Hood of surfers or something like that, and the wise-cracking Utah is drawn into seeing Bodhi as more than a criminal to be taken down – he begins to see Bodhi as a friend.

But is friendship possible across these lines, even if Bodhi is more a friend to Utah than the guys on his side like Harp or Pappas? What is friendship really supposed to be about? Maybe friendship ends up being about believing in the good in someone, even when no one else does.

pointbreak3

Ultimately, there’s some underlying spirituality here thanks to the Bodhi – like Buddha or some new age Morpheus, he’s quick to see that everything is connected but he’s hooked on the thrill of the rush, the high, the next great adrenaline rush. It’s ultimately his downfall, because he’s looking for some feeling that he can’t quite grasp, needing more and more danger to scratch that itch.

Until his itch leads him too deep, right? When the robbers cross the line, and someone dies, that’s when everything starts to unravel for them. It’s when we realize that no matter how ‘good’ someone wants to claim they are, they usually revert to self-serving behavior when things get tough. That’s when Utah’s ‘law’ orientation proves to be the moral compass that holds the world together, not the free-for-all, feel-good oscillation that Bodhi has lived by.

That sense of who he is allows Utah to pursue Bodhi – and to push for the least confrontational end to the conflict. Utah knows that pursuing the rush can’t be all there is, that it can’t be enough. He tries to save Bodhi from his self-destructive behavior, but he’s gone too far and he can’t turn back.

Too often, we pursue the thrills or what feels good because the ‘law’, God’s moral code written on our hearts, seems too constrictive or too hard to live out. We think it’s easier doing what we want, rather than doing what we should. And still, someone shows up, the moral agent of our hearts, whispering, ‘this isn’t the way, turn back, repent.’

For the 1991?Point Break, the rush is extreme – and powerful – but it ultimately proves that there’s more to life than what feels good.

 

 

 

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