Movie Review: Push (2009)

In Paul McGuigan's dopey superhero techno-thriller, Push, the Asian mob bad guys' superpower is screaming really loud. I wish I could call them 'screamers,' but their "type" in the film is actually dubbed 'bleeders,' as their banshee wails make their adversaries' heads explode, and everything else within earshot (how pleasant).

This stereotypical (intentionally so?), marginally insulting aspect is one of many, as Push traffics in uninspired and recycled superhero abilities we've seen a million times over in a bevy of other supernatural action flicks (X-Men, The Matrix, and last year's god awful Babylon A.D., for example). The only thing that makes this movie just a tier or so above something like Doug Liman's loathsome Jumper (besides the fact that there's no Hayden Christensen in sight), is the sense that McGuigan's intention to entertain is earnest, and that the guy actually has some talent; various visual ticks and tricks convince that Push has style and panache to burn.

In fact, the film starts out as at least a passable genre flick, with some striking individual scenes and mostly tolerable (if hollow) performances. Above all, just about everybody here is likable (even if Chris Evans is still not living up to the reputation director Danny Boyle insists he deserves).

Set in China (because the city of Hong Kong is filled with enough shiny flashing lights to almost take our minds off the ridiculousness of this plot), Push finds Nick (Evans), a do-nothing slacker who's apparently toiled his life away in a rundown apartment and racked up a serious bad debt with local Chinese gamblers, hiding out from a particularly nasty U.S. government agency (is there any other kind?), dubbed Division, run by smooth operator and 'pusher' Henry Carver (Djimon Hounsou of Blood Diamond and Gladiator fame), who killed Nick's father right before his eyes when Nick was just a boy.

Carver, Nick, and every other significant character in the film is endowed with a "type" of superpower, and labeled accordingly. As the hurried opening narration fragmentarily describes, this all has something to do with experiments performed on humans by the Germans in the Nazi era, and perpetuated now by our government. And though I didn't follow the film close enough to quite get them all down, I know this much: as a pusher, Carver has the ability to put thoughts into others' heads and make them believe convoluted realities that aren't really real (a tricky bit of tediousness which sinks the plot later on). Nick, meanwhile, is a 'mover,' which as you may have figured out allows him to 'move' (not to be confused with 'push,' as I did constantly) objects and people with his mind (think telekinesis). Other freakjobs include Cassie (Dakota Fanning), the wise-beyond-her-years clairvoyant, or 'watcher,' who foresees that everyone is going to die; and Kira (the lovely Camilla Belle), who just looks stoned through this entire thing. She too, like Carver, is a pusher.

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Article Author: Sam C. Mac

I'm the Editor-In-Chief of film and music review site In Review Online. In the past, I've contributed to Pop Matters, as well as a local publication, Provincetown Magazine. I attend film festivals the world over (Tribeca, Toronto, and Cannes for the …

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  • 1 - chris

    Oct 12, 2011 at 12:19 pm

    seriously, who ever wrote this needs to get a life they over thinking things i thought it was a great film and with critics like you it has stopped them bringing out another which i thought would be some of the best thriller films out.

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