BEFORE: I moved up the films by a day, now that I can't watch the movie "Little" anywhere - but you know, I think the chain made the right call there. John Hoogenakker carries over from "One Battle After Another", a film that really didn't link to as many other movies as I expected. But I still get to issue a Birthday SHOUT-out to Mr. Hoogenakker, born 4/23/1977, and I really had to DIG into his bio on IMDB to learn his birthday. Why can't this be easier to find, for everyone? Anyway, this is the middle film in a 3-film series linked by Hoogenakker. Remember when I once linked four high-school romance films that all had Wolfgang Novogratz in them? That guy's only been in seven feature films, and I watched FOUR of them in a row!
Too late, I noticed there was a way to link from "One Battle After Another" to "Marty Supreme", which just debuted on cable. Paul Grimstad appears in both films - and I could have dropped in just one more film to get back to HERE, but then I would have missed Hoogenakker's birthday. So I'm going to figure I can get back to Marty Supreme soon, somehow, some other way.
THE PLOT: Terrorists take over the G20 summit and President Sutton has to bring her governing and military experience together to defend her family, country and the world.
AFTER: Somehow, implausibly, against all reasonable expectations, this is the THIRD movie this year on the theme of world leaders getting together at summit meetings. And amazingly, something goes very wrong each time, but you know, we've already proven that almost EVERY movie is about what goes wrong. Back in January I watched "Rumours", which had Charles Dance playing the U.S. President, and the world coming to an end while the world leaders at the G7, umm, drafted a statement about it. That was a weird movie, for sure. Then the next week I watched "Heads of State", which had John Cena playing the U.S. President, and he had to team up with Idris Elba as the British Prime Minister while someone was trying to derail a NATO summit meeting. Now in this THIRD action film about summits, Viola Davis plays the U.S. President at the G20 meeting, which is hijacked by terrorists. These are three VERY different movies, only one is a comedy, really and only one of them is severely weird, but they're all kind of drawing from the same source material, which is "Let's imagine an international summit, and then think about what can go horribly wrong there."
Today's film is more serious action, as the female President is ex-military, so she can handle a gun and she can fight hand-to-hand, also she's got leadership qualities, which come in handy when she has to rally a team that includes the UK Prime Minister, the head of the International Monetary Fund and the First Lady of South Korea, none of whom are known for their fighting skills. Thankfully she's also got her primary Secret Service bodyguard with her, and her teenage daughter, who happens to be an expert hacker and electronics expert. Now the First Gentleman isn't great in a fight, but her family might not even BE with her at the G20 meeting in South Africa if her daughter hadn't managed to sneak out of the White House one night, disabling security to do so. This is kind of a "burned toast" plot point, because young Serena was being punished and made to go to the summit, also because President Sutton didn't want to leave her at home in D.C. with no parental supervision. So OF COURSE the teenage girl holds the key to making contact with the outside world, uploading a video that shows what's really going on during the hostage crisis. But I'm getting ahead of myself here.
President Sutton is going to the G20 in Cape Town with her Treasury Secretary (and bestie) to present a plan to empower struggling sub-Saharan farmers by giving them access to digital currency. NITPICK POINT: I think that due to the instability of the crypto market, that plan is just as likely to bankrupt them as it is to grant them financial freedom. But what the heck do I know? But the conference is attacked by Edward Rutledge, a former Australian special forces soldier who also works in security. After taking control of the hotel and holding most of the world leaders hostage, he accuses the U.S. President of corruption, urging citizens around the world to withdraw their money from banks and buy crypto immediately, because there's about to be worldwide financial collapse. Well, he's right, in a way, because if everyone around the world did just that, it WOULD bring financial collapse, essentially most of the paper money in the world would decrease in value. Theoretically, at least.
But President Sutton and a few world leaders evade the mercenaries and avoid capture, so Rutledge executes a few of the world leaders to try to convince her to come back. He's also recording world leaders saying pangram phrases so he can create deepfakes of them saying whatever he wants, which should help him destabilize the world's economies quicker, and prompt people to buy more crypto WHICH he owns a lot of, of course, and the sudden interest in it should make the value go up, according to that economics class I never took. Meanwhile Derek, the First Gentleman, rescues his two children and tries to keep them safe, but eventually he is captured by a rogue Secret Service agent, while his children get away.
The President's team makes it to "the Beast", the presidential armored limo, in the parking garage. The team starts to drive away, but President Sutton stays behind in order to try and save her husband from the terrorists. She surrenders herself to the deepfake process, and the video Rutledge makes of her confessing to crimes crashes the U.S. economy, and gains him $150 billion in crypto coin sales. Even as an international strike team finally breaches the hotel, Rutledge continues to torment the President by shooting her husband and trying to escape with her daughter as a hostage. I won't say how it ends, but come on, never count out the star action hero, the female President is really the John McClane hero here.
Given the time-frame necessary to make a movie these days, I'd guess that some screenwriter figured that the winner of the 2024 election would be a woman of color - and then once Trump got re-elected of course it was too late to change the script here, plus it wouldn't make any sense if they did, so they just stuck to the script. I know, I know, President Sutton here does not seem to be directly based on Kamala Harris, but I still suspect someone was trying to draw inspiration from future events that just never ended up happening. The Treasury Secretary is a middle-aged blonde woman who herself had an unsuccessful bid for the Presidency, so she's clearly based on Hillary Clinton. Maybe.
The movie was announced in November 2022, and then production was put on hold in July 2023 because of the SAG-AFTRA strike, so it didn't begin filming until January 2024 - yeah, my timeline holds up, even though Biden was still President in November 2022, and nobody was yet calling for him to retire, nobody was thinking at that point that Trump could come back, so Kamala was a valid possibility for the next President, whether Biden served a second term, or died or stepped down, in late 2022 it probably seemed that all roads led to President Harris.
You know, I still need to figure out my whole summer line-up, which will include the Doc Block. But this is a special year, this July 4 will mark the 250th birthday of the U.S.A., the semiquincentennial, or whatever they're calling it. I don't know if I could possibly pick a film special enough to watch on such a day, I've watched docs about the American government befor on July 4, even a doc called "American Symphony", but damn, what do I choose for America's 250th Anniversary? Do I even have anything on theme on my list? Damn, if only I hadn't watched all the action movies where the U.S. President was a main character...
Directed by Patricia Riggen (director of "The 33")
Also starring Viola Davis (last seen in "The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes"), Anthony Anderson (last seen in "The Back-up Plan"), Ramon Rodriguez (last seen in "Ira & Abby"), Marsai Martin, Antony Starr, Douglas Hodge (last seen in "The Devil All the Time"), Elizabeth Marvel (last heard in "Dark Waters"), Christopher Farrar, Sabrina Impacciatore (last seen in "The Passion of the Christ"), MeeWha Alana Lee, Gideon Emery (last heard in "Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay"), Conrad Kemp (last seen in "The Girl"), Joseph Steven Yang, Emmanuel Castis, David James, Clark Gregg (last seen in "Moxie"), Julius Tennon (last seen in "The Woman King"), Theo Bongani Ndyalvane, Noxolo Dlamini, Ali Suliman (last seen in "Body of Lies"), Angela Sarafyan (last seen in "Superman" (2025)), Stephen Jennings (last seen in "The Kissing Booth 3"), Colin Moss (ditto), Caitlin Mehner (last seen in "The Best of Enemies"), Heike Brunner, Jacques Theron, Anthony C. Hyde, Riaz Solker, Tshamano Sebe, Jose Domingos, Jandre le Roux (last seen in "Tomb Raider"), Adrian Collins (ditto), Tendaiishe Chitima, Robert Hobbs (last seen in "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom"), Alexander Maniatis, Terence Bridgett, Carolyn Forword, Chris van Rensburg, Jason K. Ralph, Schelaine Bennett (last seen in "Monster Hunter").
Also starring Viola Davis (last seen in "The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes"), Anthony Anderson (last seen in "The Back-up Plan"), Ramon Rodriguez (last seen in "Ira & Abby"), Marsai Martin, Antony Starr, Douglas Hodge (last seen in "The Devil All the Time"), Elizabeth Marvel (last heard in "Dark Waters"), Christopher Farrar, Sabrina Impacciatore (last seen in "The Passion of the Christ"), MeeWha Alana Lee, Gideon Emery (last heard in "Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay"), Conrad Kemp (last seen in "The Girl"), Joseph Steven Yang, Emmanuel Castis, David James, Clark Gregg (last seen in "Moxie"), Julius Tennon (last seen in "The Woman King"), Theo Bongani Ndyalvane, Noxolo Dlamini, Ali Suliman (last seen in "Body of Lies"), Angela Sarafyan (last seen in "Superman" (2025)), Stephen Jennings (last seen in "The Kissing Booth 3"), Colin Moss (ditto), Caitlin Mehner (last seen in "The Best of Enemies"), Heike Brunner, Jacques Theron, Anthony C. Hyde, Riaz Solker, Tshamano Sebe, Jose Domingos, Jandre le Roux (last seen in "Tomb Raider"), Adrian Collins (ditto), Tendaiishe Chitima, Robert Hobbs (last seen in "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom"), Alexander Maniatis, Terence Bridgett, Carolyn Forword, Chris van Rensburg, Jason K. Ralph, Schelaine Bennett (last seen in "Monster Hunter").
RATING: 6 out of 10 tied-up servers in the kitchen
