‘The Commissioner’ Conspires but Doesn’t Manage to Intrigue
- Share via
When his investigation into a chemical weapons cover-up takes a menacing turn, John Hurt’s character in “The Commissioner” observes: “It’s all a bit James Bond, isn’t it?”
The problem with this Movie Channel presentation, however, is that it isn’t a bit James Bond. Even an apartment bombing and a massive toxic spill fail to energize this snooze-fest, which debuts tonight on the premium cable channel.
“The Commissioner” combines a number of hot-button issues--including nervousness about the manufacture of chemical weapons and unease over the growing power of the European Union--into a vast conspiracy theory in which collusion between world governments and big business puts the whole planet at risk.
Unfortunately, Hurt--so watchable in such movies as “The Elephant Man” and the more recent “Love and Death on Long Island”--is unbearably stiff in this role as a scandal-plagued British politician who is banished to a post on the European Commission in Brussels. George Sluizer’s direction fails to generate any urgency in the turgid screenplay that he wrote with Christina Kallas, based on Stanley Johnson’s novel.
* “The Commissioner” debuts tonight at 9 on the Movie Channel. The network has rated it TV-14 (may be inappropriate for children younger than 14).
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.