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Movie Review: Push

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Fanning casts off her child-star persona in telekinetic thriller ‘Push'
Push
Running Time: 111 min
Release Date: Feb 6, 2009
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By Roger Moore, The Orlando Sentinel
The Charlotte Observer

Dakota Fanning plays her first-ever drunk scene in “Push,” a new comic-book-inspired thriller about mind readers and mind-benders, people with telekinetic powers given to them by the government in some demented effort to create walking, talking human weapons.

It's an ambitious attempt to shove the whole of a fairly complex comic-book universe into a single messy and garish movie. It's out there, even if it is only a confusing mash-up of every movie or TV show you've ever seen about telekinesis – well, except for “Firestarter.”

But back to Ms. Fanning's woozy, boozy moment. She plays Cassie, a 13-year-old “watcher,” somebody who can see the future and sketch it out on her note pad. Her mom once told her that she'd see “clearer” if she had a few belts. So Cassie does and Fanning takes another giant stagger to leaving her child-actress screen persona behind.

Cassie shows up at the Hong Kong door of a “mover” played by Chris Evans. He's been expecting her. His dad, a watcher, told him to look for her 10 years ago.

And here she is, perky, punky and ready to bring down “The Division,” the agency that created all these “special people” such as “sniffs” (who can smell every place you've used an object, and thus track you), “bleeders” (who scream until you bleed), “shifters,” “wipes” and so on.

Then, there are the “pushers,” who can shove a thought into your head, convince you to kill yourself or alter your memory. One of them, Kira (Camilla Belle), has escaped. And she's bringing a magic syringe to Hong Kong, where people will die in an effort to shape the future that many of them already have seen.

The race is on to get to Kira and the syringe full of telekinesis juice that will turn those who take it (and survive) into super weapons. “Special” Chinese agents, including the lollipop-sucking watcher “pop” girl, are on the trail. But so is The Division, led by an evil-eyed Djimon Hounsou.

Fanning is properly plucky, Evans makes a passable if uncompelling action hero, Hounsou isn't really menacing enough to pull off the villain part and Belle is all bangs and blandness.

Anybody not familiar with the comics may be a little confused by all the differing flavors of telekinetic folk. The odd snappy line doesn't make up for a generally heartless script.

“You lose a bet with your hairdresser?”

But the telekinetic gunfights are amusing (guns floating in the air) for those who go for that sort of thing.

My prognostication? “Push” will be pushed out of theaters and out of minds by Fanning's 15th birthday (Feb. 23.). They grow up so fast!

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 02/05/2009 - The Charlotte Observer - Roger Moore, The Orlando Sentinel

But this comic book for the screen fails to fulfill its big ambitions.

(Full review)

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