This character-driven drama about redemption feels fresh, mostly due to good storytelling and two fine lead performances
The Guardian (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:142
Fresh:52
Rotten:90
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: The Coast Guard gets its chance for a heroic movie tribute, but The Guardian does it no justice, borrowing cliche after cliche from other (and better) military branch movies.
Runtime: 2 hrs 19 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $54,983,983
Synopsis: Kevin Costner and Ashton Kutcher team up in this torch-passing tale of the brave men and women in the Navy Coastguard elite rescue diver unit. A catastrophic rescue mission leaves him wounded after... Kevin Costner and Ashton Kutcher team up in this torch-passing tale of the brave men and women in the Navy Coastguard elite rescue diver unit. A catastrophic rescue mission leaves him wounded after his wife (Sela Ward) walks out on him, so heavily decorated, reluctantly aging rescue diver Ben Randall (Costner) takes some leave from the ocean to assume instructor duties down at the naval training base. There his humorless pedagogy rubs a lot of trainees the wrong way, but a champion high-school swimmer, Jake (Kucher), has no problem keeping up, and it looks like old Ben may have found someone worthy to be his replacement. But first each man has to wrestle with his own personal demons...and each other. Under the no-nonsense direction of Andrew Davis (THE FUGITIVE, UNDER SIEGE), the visceral energy flows nonstop through this familiar but nonetheless riveting affair. Shot in a flat, matter-of-fact manner, the harshness of naval academy life is celebrated without being glamorized, while the rescues at sea are nothing short of hair-raising, making excellent use of CGI effects to plunge the viewer right into the towering waves and storms along with the divers. Several familiar, stalwart faces are on hand to help the boys become men and the men to accept aging gracefully, including John Heard, Clancy Brown, and Neal McDonough. Costner is perfect in a curmudgeonly role that fits him like a tailor-made wet suit. The real surprise is Kutcher, who seems to grow as an actor as his character grows as a person, revealing lots of murky depth. Bonnie Bramlet adds some sparkle as the singer at the local watering hole. [More]
Starring: Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher, Clancy Brown, Sela Ward
Starring: Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher, Clancy Brown, Sela Ward, Melissa Sagemiller, Travis Willingham, John Heard, Neal McDonough, Bonnie Bramlett
Director: Andrew Davis
Director: Andrew Davis
Screenwriter: Ron L. Brinkerhoff
Producer: Beau Flynn, Tripp Vinson
Composer: Trevor Rabin
Studio: Touchstone Pictures
Reviews for The Guardian
The best way I can describe The Guardian is the Coast Guard version of An Officer and a Gentleman, although I doubt this film will be remembered as fondly.
The fictionalized Guardian doesn't contain post-hurricane rescues, but memories of the U.S. Coast Guard's search-and-rescue operations in New Orleans likely will be stirred during the movie's dramatic rescues at sea.
"The Guardian" is one of the worst movies to come out this year because it's such a crass, unwieldy mess of military-flick clichés. It's a rock-headed copy of a copy of a copy, halfheartedly written, acted and edited.
Like a light out on the ocean, you can see everything coming for miles in The Guardian.
Kevin Costner and Ashton Kutcher’s The Guardian drags on like a slow boat ride to Anchorage, its standard-issue heroics and flavorless dialogue gone stale long before the movie arrives at the big, valorous finish.
This is a silly movie made of taped-together Hollywood hokum, the kind where you just know the pitch was something like, 'It's Top Gun meets An Officer and a Gentleman in The Perfect Storm.'
... with Kevin Costner splashing about in this An Officer and a Gentleman-meets Top Gun-meets the Coast Guard plot, the sea of clichés is mostly palatable.
The Guardian tries tremendously hard to win audiences over with manly derring-do, exciting action, and impossible-obstacles-overcome uplift.
The Guardian tries tremendously hard to win audiences over with manly derring-do, exciting action, and impossible-obstacles-overcome uplift.
A pleasant enough distraction, although like so much of Costner's work it is far too long.
The action sequences might be a treat but the non-action sequences prove that this film needed some rescuing, and didn't get it.
The Guardian is bookended by two technically complex rescue sequences, but the movie sorely lacks momentum. So it's up to the cast to transport us, and that doesn't happen either.
An Officer and a Gentleman joins the Coast Guard and struggles to stay afloat.
Watching The Guardian is like treading water in a cold tank when you'd rather be sun-basking on a raft in a tranquil cove.
The Guardian is entirely predictable but it's a good formula. They make the ride fun.
Impossible tests of endurance: check. Grinding down of cadet's arrogance: check. Phony romance between cadet and sassy babe: check. Fatherly benediction, the newly minted hero bursting with pride: check. Boo-rah!
The Guardian isn't the worst aqua-themed movie of Kevin Costner's career. Not with Waterworld in his rearview mirror.
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