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Thursday, December 12, 2024

'Carry-On' Reviews: Film Truly Take Flight

         On December 13, 2024, Netflix released 'Carry-On', which has earned predominantly positive reviews and a score of 84% on Rotten Tomatoes. In the film, "A young TSA agent fights to outsmart a mysterious traveler who blackmails him into letting a dangerous package slip onto a Christmas Eve flight." The ensemble cast includes Sofia Carson, Taron Egerton, Jason Bateman, and Danielle Deadwyler. But what did the critics say?

        Nick Schager of The Daily Beast says, "The ’80s and ’90s were a golden age of high-octane action-thrillers, and that tradition is continued with exciting aplomb by Carry-On. Following two misguided forays into tentpole extravaganzas (Jungle Cruise, Black Adam), director Jaume Collet-Serra returns to the sort of terrain he successfully tilled with Liam Neeson in Unknown and Non-Stop via this fleet and clever tale of a TSA agent who finds himself blackmailed by a mysterious villain into letting a carry-on bag pass through security. A clockwork genre contraption that consistently devises new ways to keep its protagonist in do-or-die crisis, this breakneck Netflix offering confirms the enduring vitality of its chosen formula—and, in the process, proves an unexpected and welcome Yuletide streaming gift." Adding, "Bateman, meanwhile, channels his Ozark protagonist’s amorality for the cool, calm, and ruthlessly sociopathic Traveler, whose flat, business-like demeanor is reflected in his nondescript clothing and baseball cap. They make for a fine cat-and-mouse pair, and Deadwyler, Norris, and Logan Marshall-Green (as a Department of Homeland Security official assigned to assist Elena with her investigation) provide colorful, convincing support."

        Jim Vorel of Paste Magazine notes, "The result is a hamstrung thriller that feels cheaper than it should, like a feature-length episode of FOX’s 9-1-1, bogged down by a sense of malaise radiating outward from its protagonist in waves." Concluding, "Taron Egerton would no doubt very much appreciate it if you would take the bait and compare his new, holiday-adjacent Netflix action thriller Carry-On to Die Hard … or perhaps Die Hard 2, actually. And indeed, this is absolutely a vintage thriller in its DNA, perhaps more of a ‘90s homage than an ‘80s one; the kind of flick where a workaday white male schmuck has to rise to the occasion to thwart some seemingly omniscient bad guys while rediscovering the true meaning of … I don’t know, family? Christmas? Unpaid overtime? The point is, our protagonist learns a lesson, shoots some guys and emerges with his life and priorities newly sorted out. The only problem, of course, is that this vanishing breed of modestly budgeted thriller typically revolves almost entirely around the magnetic draw of a star whose easy confidence and charisma can make you fond of the character, even against your own will. And for whatever reason, Egerton is not that star for Carry-On, a film whose protagonist remains an awkward, unreadable cipher from start to finish, dragging down the stronger supporting work surrounding him. His “Ethan Kopek” feels like he should be a minor character in someone else’s film, rather than the star of his own."

        Mitchell Beaupre of The Film Stage praises the film, stating, "Carry-On keeps you on the edge of your seat with its myriad turns, always being sure to ground itself in realistic characters who offer the opportunity to question what we would do if presented with a similar scenario."

Photo by Josh Eckstein on Unsplash
        Matt Lynch of In Review Online was less impressed, stating, "Even lay viewers have seen this movie a dozen times, but there are still some cheap pleasures to be had with the back and forth between the mastermind and the hostage as Ethan continues desperate but clever attempts to either get someone’s attention and help or to foil the Traveler’s plans altogether. Those attempts almost unfailingly get somebody killed in addition to being increasingly implausible, but Collet-Serra at least keeps things mostly moving at a good clip. The film’s major problem, then, isn’t its familiarity, but its other parallel half, which features a police detective (Danielle Deadwyler) who finds herself investigating the Traveler and his goons, and whose exploits outside the airport grind the film’s momentum to a full stop. Forcing these twin storylines to inevitably intersect at Carry-On‘s end utterly destroys the pace of these crushingly overlong two hours. Collet-Serra clearly understands the assignment and delivers sturdy work, but any time the movie steps away from its core premise and contained setting, it crashes."




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