
CinemaSerf
6
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Mar 12, 2025
After a damned if you do, damned if you don’t decision, Secret Service agent “Banning” (Gerard Butler) has been removed from the presidential protection detail and given a desk job. That’s probably just as well for “President Asher” (Aaron Eikhart) as a visit from his opposite number from South Korea goes quite spectacularly awry and next thing the White House is in bits and the VIPs either dead or hostages in the bunker deep beneath the rubble. “Kang” (Rick Yuen) is leading the terrorists, with a little help from a disgruntled fifth columnist, and is demanding seismic changes to American policy in Korea else the body count is going to mount. “Banning” knows his way around the building and so in best “Die Hard” tradition, proceeds to sneak about causing the usual havoc to the perpetrators as they execute their dastardly plan and then hope to commandeer a helicopter to get them out of the wreckage and off to safety - with, of course, their prime hostage. I think to get anything from this you will have to be prepared to completely suspend belief and just sit back and let it wash over you. That an unidentified aircraft would be permitted to fly anywhere near a major global metropolis without being blitzed from the sky is just the opening eye-raising scene in this slew of frying pan to fire scenarios that just go to show that the spirit of those wartime adventures where one plucky person could defeat dozens of heavily armed and entrenched Nazis and… well you get the drift. Butler does enough, I suppose, as he makes for a reasonable action hero stalking the corridors using his ninja skills to deadly effect but there’s isn’t the slightest hint of jeopardy here as the body count mounts as per any number of shoot ‘em up video games. It passes the time if you just want some noise in the background, but to sit and concentrate on it for two hours is likely to cause brain rot.