Olympus Has Fallen

  • USA Olympus Has Fallen (more)
Trailer 1

Plots(1)

When a group of heavily armed and meticulously trained extremists launch a daring daylight ambush on the White House, the President (Aaron Eckhart) and his staff are taken hostage inside an impenetrable underground bunker. But as the Oval office and its environs sustain an aerial and ground attack, a disgraced former U.S. Secret Service agent, Mike Banning (Gerard Butler), finds his way into the besieged building to do the job he has trained for all his life: to protect the president - at all costs. With tension rising, the Acting President (Morgan Freeman) and US national security team must rely on Banning to rescue the President before the terrorists can unleash their ultimate, terrifying plan. From visionary director, Antoine Fuqua, Olympus Has Fallen is an electrifying, and inspired action thriller that will keep your heart pounding from start to finish! (Lionsgate Home Entertainment)

(more)

Videos (13)

Trailer 1

Reviews (11)

3DD!3 

all reviews of this user

English Pleasant, funny, fully of great lines and a lot of innocent passers-by die. Kim has nothing to be ashamed about on his American PR campaign. Just cut the ending. ;) Butler’s show is a soothing band aid for McClane’s recent failure. He swears like a trooper and super smooth bitch-slapping insubordination. The initial attack has outrageous drive, even taking out the Washington Dick, not to mention demolishing half of the house (including Lincoln’s bedroom) and acre upon acre of fine lawns. The tricks are maybe a little too obviously digital, but for relatively little investment we get a good show, the actors do their work and, even though the screenplay is thoroughbred B-movie, it soothes the soul. The music is also pleasantly patriotic. Simply a Seagal-like movie, crossed with 24, featuring Leonidas. Tough luck if you want anything more. ()

D.Moore 

all reviews of this user

English Within the genre, it's quite good and inoffensive, but Roland Emmerich played with practically the same theme in White House Down in a much more ingenious way and... And above all, in a funnier way. Indeed, exaggeration or any lightening of Olympus Has Fallen is what is most lacking. It is very action-packed, the occupation of the White House is briskly filmed and it all happens so fast that you almost don't notice the classic "All those pros got shot like a herd of sheep" crap. But everything else is meant to be so deadly serious, the characters swearing allegiance to the stars and stripes with death on their tongues, that weaker people with an allergy to kitsch, clichés and patriotism simply can't enjoy it. ()

Ads

Isherwood 

all reviews of this user

English Republican agitprop for pure American values, and the willingness to confront the problem head-on and tackle everything with a straight face. It’s a mistake to see it in the opposite vein of the movie theater premieres, as Emmerich's strumming of the "democratic" string created more thematic self-irony, bringing expectations down to zero. Fuqua irritates the audience's receptors only with his impressive body count, his willingness to shoot anyone in the head (even a woman), and he only improves the Butler machine’s skill in terms of the number of headshots. The rest of the time, it sort of wanders the darkened corridors of the White House, preferring to keep the protagonists silent because the script doesn't throw anything too miraculous at them. I can't think of which twenty minutes of the plot I would sacrifice in favor of better compactness, but, on the other hand, I place the quarter of an hour with the cast of Olympus Has Fallen on the action pedestal of the best there is to see at the moment. 2 and a ½. ()

Necrotongue 

all reviews of this user

English For all patriotic Americans who revel in melodrama, this film is a must-watch. Personally, it was a bit of a struggle for me because I couldn't stand all those speeches and looks full of national pride. The screenplay felt like a chaotic mess, with logic barely getting a look-in. If it weren't for the captivating CGI destruction of American icons and some well-executed action sequences, I would have been much less generous but I gritted my teeth and settled on two stars. / Lesson learned: Trash collectors are not what they seem. ()

Matty 

all reviews of this user

English Praise God! Anti-crisis, pro-American propaganda in a pure action package whose creators have apparently watched nothing but Roland Emmerich and Michael Bay movies in the past twenty years. But they very well remember Die Hard and all of the Chuck Norris shoot ’em ups from the eighties. (The comparison with McTiernan’s film requires some further elaboration: though Die Hard and Olympus Has Fallen both respond in a certain way to the crisis of masculinity, and the destruction of phallic objects – Nakatomi Plaza and the Washington Monument, respectively – is a significant visual element in each film, McClane MUST shoot the bad guys and his reward is the regained respect of his wife; conversely, Banning WANTS to shoot the bad guys and he sees his involvement in the action as a service to his country and a way to make up for a previous mistake.) ___ It’s stupid. It’s charmingly and unbelievably stupid and inappropriately serious, but thanks to the work with deadlines and the well-thought-out distribution of action scenes, it has a fast pace, an R rating and a roughly ten-second OTT shot of a charred American flag falling in slow motion from the White House balcony. It’s been a long time since we’ve seen such rewarding material for a study of ideological practices in Hollywood genre filmmaking. ___ The opening aerial shot familiarises us with the majesty of the American landscape, represented in the following minutes by “more civilised” symbols. There is always room in the shot for the White House or at least the American flag, properly placed so that we are guaranteed to notice it (even a “randomly” passing bus is painted in the national colours). The intro briefly acquaints us with both of the male protagonists (the president as a tough guy who knows how to box and is fully devoted to his country, but he doesn’t ignore his family; Mike also as a tough guy, but family-oriented and popular with children) and another way of relating to American values – tradition is important, the legacy of the forebears, represented here by the grandfather’s watch (which, after the death of the president’s wife, takes on a secondary, somewhat fetishistic significance – it brings the woman, or rather the family, into the present). As on September 11th, the attack comes from the air. This time, however, America’s defenders are ready, they know how to respond (the president does not just sit impassively, but goes into the bunker), and if the architectural symbol of American democracy is eventually occupied anyway, it’s because of the numerical superiority and overwhelming force brought to bear by the attackers (whose high-grade military equipment could be the envy of any army in the world). ___ Though the resolution of foreign conflicts is exclusively in the purview of the Americans, they don’t intervene anywhere – rather, they are attacked (by the citizens of one of the last countries that is not in any way important to the American film industry) and have to defend themselves. As previously outlined, it is necessary to defend democratic values, of which the United States, because of its long tradition of democracy, considers itself to be the global guarantor (the ubiquitous portraits of former American presidents, the old cannon in front of the White House and the bust of Lincoln with which Mike pacifies an adversary are all characteristic of this). If the terrorists cite “fucking Wall Street”, i.e. destructive capitalism, as the reason for their attack, they have misunderstood the values on which American society is built, namely family and democracy, which, unlike money, do not corrupt one’s character but improve it, and are thus inviolable. ___ The film’s biggest hero is the white president (the black “president” only fills in for him, even though he has incomparably more charisma and life experience). He is a decisive, infallible man who personifies  “Americanness”. Therefore, his life is more important than the life of anyone else. After the attack, the other characters are primarily interested in knowing whether the president is okay, not whether their loved ones have been harmed or whether they themselves are injured. The lives of a select few have much greater value than the lives of thousands of anonymous people getting shot to pieces (the individual is valued more highly than the group). ___ In connection with the emphasis on individual merit, saving the world falls within the competency of heroic individuals with special skills, not the group with its modern technologies, which are turned against their creators (the exemplarily incompetent military). However, the nuclear weapons that the United States could use to defend itself in the event of an attack are not what’s bad here; what’s bad is the terrorists who want to take control of those weapons. Or, said another way, the evil comes from the outside, which also applies to Kang’s threat of poverty (the blame would thus be shifted from the “capitalist” financial crisis to the terrorists). Similarly, the torturing and killing of women are acceptable if you inflict them on people who have no aversion to killing a dog or beating a woman. ___ The message of the film, which guilelessly (and like the futurists who many years ago considered war to be the only means of cleansing the world) points to the revitalising function of historical crises (and thus mitigates fears of the incessantly mentioned crisis of whatever), is wonderfully simple – we do not negotiate with terrorists and you don’t fuck with the USA! One can be either amused or disgusted by that. I chose the first option and I don’t regret the two hours that I spent with Olympus Has Fallen, though I'm also quite disturbed by the idea that it was meant to be taken deadly seriously. 75% () (less) (more)

Gallery (51)