Movie Review: Eddie the Eagle

 

 
Film Info
 

Release Date: February 27, 2016
 
MPAA Rating: PG-13
 
Starring: Taron Egerton, Hugh Jackman, Christopher Walken, Jo Hartley, Daniel Ings, and Tim McInnerny
 
Director: Dexter Fletcher
 
Writer: Sean Macaulay and Simon Kelton
 
Producer: Adam Bohling, David Reid, Rupert Maconick, Valerie Van Galder, and Matthew Vaughn
 
Distributor: 20th Century Fox
 
External Info: Official Site and Facebook
 
Genre: ,
 
Critic Rating
 
 
 
 
 


User Rating
4 total ratings

 

What We Liked


The feel-good tone and a memorable performance from Taron Egerton.

What We Didn't Like


The paint-by-numbers presentation of the story.


0
Posted  February 28, 2016 by

 
Read the Full Review
 
 

With live action family films essentially dying out as a genre – unless you count Marvel movies or straight-to-DVD Sandlot sequels – it is sort of refreshing when a movie comes out that is so clearly earmarked for pretty much everyone. And, barring one head-scratchingly out of place sex talk, Dexter Fletcher’s Eddie the Eagle is a terrific family film.

Eddie the Eagle PosterGrowing up with bad knees, resilient dreamer Eddie Edwards (Taron Egerton) is determined to become an Olympian. Trying and failing throughout his adolescence at just about every summer games sport, he finally has the epiphany that he will compete in the winter games. When he fails to qualify for the 1988 British Olympic ski team, Eddie is crushed.

However, with his mother’s encouragement and his father’s disapproval, he gets on a bus headed for Germany with the expectation of becoming Britain’s first and only ski jumper in six decades. At the training center, Eddie meets former American Olympic ski jumper Bronson Peary (Hugh Jackman), who begrudgingly agrees to help Eddie qualify for the games and represent England.

I could honestly have disclosed the entire story here and it wouldn’t have mattered at all. In fact I’m quite certain that, after reading that short synopsis, you already know exactly how the film unfolds (trust me, you do). Still, however clichéd it may be, Eddie the Eagle hits all of the familiar notes just right and ends up being quite the inspiring feel-good story, undoubtedly heightened by the two lead performances.

Egerton’s outstanding performance as Eddie, with his authentic facial expressions and under bite, just oozes likeability. He is the type of character that moviegoers are programmed to root for and I haven’t rooted for a character the way I did Eddie in quite some time. Couple that with Jackman’s subtly dark and somewhat goofy Peary and the two make a great team.

Oddly enough, the most similar movie, out of dozens of this type, is Cool Runnings, another true story that happened to take place at the very same Calgary Winter Olympics in 1988. Fans of that movie or others of that type (Rudy, The Rookie, etc.) will have a great time with Eddie the Eagle, while anyone looking for a unique or groundbreaking take on the sports biography will leave the theater at least slightly disappointed. Fortunately for me, I loved Cool Runnings.

Rocco Tenaglia

Rocco Tenaglia

Rocco Tenaglia graduated from Oakland University in 2015, with a degree in film criticism. When he isn't watching or writing about movies and TV, he is most likely either reading a Batman comic or listening to one of the unhealthily many podcasts he subscribes to.
Rocco Tenaglia

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