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Storm
Reviewed By Rich Drees
The Wachowski Brother’s Matrix trilogy has many cinematic
sins to atone for. The Swedish movie Storm is one of those
sins.
Donny (Eric
Ericson) is a writer who suddenly finds himself caught up in events
initially beyond his understanding when a mysterious leather-clad,
red-haired woman (Eva Rose) entrusts him with a small metallic box
with the cryptic instruction “Go back to the source.” Chasing her is
a dark suited man (Jonas Karlsson), anxious to retrieve the box, or
at the very least keep Donny from opening it.
Storm
is a movie that wants to unfold its various mysteries over multiple
layers of its character’s perception of realities, with vague clues
to its secrets hidden within almost surrealistic dreamscapes.
Unfortunately, all this amounts to is an awful lot of build up and
very little pay off. Instead, we get some foot chases and an
occasional shoot-out all punctuated by a car chase or two. While the
action is well staged and exciting, it ultimately doesn’t serve to
move the plot along, but instead delays any sort of story
progression.
The movie does
very little to make us want to care about Donny as a hero. In fact,
as more is revealed of his past, the less sympathetic he becomes.
Also, the nature of his repressed memory doesn’t hold up to logical
examination, as it is something that would certainly be brought up
in conversation by family on at least rare occasions.
By the film’s
end, it is revealed that the two factions warring over the
restoration of Donny’s memory are supernatural in nature, perhaps
representing Heaven and Hell themselves. But at no point is it
explained or even hinted as to why Donny is so important that they
would do battle over him, leaving us the audience wondering why we
watched this movie to begin with. |