Eye For Film >> Movies >> The Terminal (2004) Film Review
The Terminal
Reviewed by: David Haviland
In 1988, Merhan Karimi Nasseri was exiled from Iran for protesting against the Shah and flew to Paris to claim asylum. His request was rejected, and he found himself in a bizarre no man's land: exiled from home and barred from entering France. A man with no country, he has been living in Charles De Gaulle airport ever since.
Steven Spielberg's latest film, The Terminal, is based on this premise, but not on Nasseri himself. Spielberg's hero is Viktor Navorski (Tom Hanks), who arrives in the US to find his native Krakozhia has lost its international recognition during the flight.
The airport is run by Frank Dixon (Stanley Tucci), a tightly-wound bureaucrat who initially tries to help Viktor. He suggests that, although he is not strictly allowed into the US, leaving the airport discreetly would be an easy task. When Viktor fails to take the hint, Dixon even takes him to the door, but Viktor refuses to break the rules.
It's at this point that audiences might lose patience with him. Respecting the law is admirable to a point, but surely not when the enforcers themselves are telling you to ignore the red tape? Dixon also loses patience and becomes increasingly hostile.
Nonetheless, Viktor has a breezy, positive outlook that allows him to overcome obstacles with good humour, and brings him to the attention of Amelia (Catherine Zeta-Jones), a glamorous air hostess with a turbulent love life.
The Terminal is a sweet comedy, which aims for Capra-esque humanism, but with a premise that never gets off the ground. Hanks is always charming, but his Viktor has too many "funny foreigner" tics and pratfalls and seems to have been based on Borat.
The film is amusing throughout, but never funny, or dramatic enough to match any of Spielberg's recent output. The romantic subplots are unconvincing and the endless product placement seems out of place in such a homespun fable.
Also, it suffers from a central paradox. For us to engage with Viktor, he needs to be reasonably smart and resourceful. However, for the plot to work, he needs to willingly imprison himself in an airport for nine months, which makes him appear a bit thick. Consequently, the story never grabs us, as Viktor is either too smart to really get stuck like this, or too dumb for us to care.
Reviewed on: 02 Sep 2004