Review by
Eric Hillis
Back in the '90s, before the internet beamed its world of smut into our homes, hormonal teenage boys had to make do with the Saturday teatime tradition of Baywatch to get their fill of female flesh. In anticipation of the obligatory slo-mo sequence of Pamela Anderson's cleavage bouncing in her red swimsuit like two bald midgets running a sack race, a lot of VCR pause buttons were worn out. But also fast forward buttons, as in between such mammary moments the show was the very definition of tedium. The new generation of sweaty palmed tykes who check out this feature film cash-in will likely hit the fast-forward button too, as Baywatch the movie is so unremittingly awful it may well turn its young male audience off boobs for life.
As unfathomable as it may seem, millions of viewers across the globe
enjoyed the original show on an unironic level (reflected heavily in the
amount of Chinese financiers' logos that precede the film), but in the
21st century there's no feasible way to play this concept with a straight
face, and so Baywatch the movie is another pisstake in the
21 Jump Street mould. It's such a misfire however that it
makes that other recent big screen adaptation,
CHiPs, look like the Grand-Mommy of this sub-genre, the under-rated and ahead
of its time The Brady Bunch Movie.
Here, Mitch Buchanan, the superhero lifeguard originally played by human meme David Hasselhoff (who of course turns up for an obligatory cameo here, along with former co-star Anderson, who has had so much work done at this point that she literally walks in slow motion now), is essayed by Dwayne Johnson in a demeaning piece of miscasting. Johnson's all-American sincerity, which usually brightens up every movie he appears in, is at odds with this film's snark, and hearing expletives come from his mouth is akin to stumbling across Jimmy Stewart's sex tape. Johnson is the guy you'd ask to pick up your kids from school when you get a flat tyre, or to take your wife to dinner when you're forced to work late. He has a rare old world innocence that seems out of step with these cynical times. That's why we love him, why he unites so many disparate viewers, and his role here feels like we're being robbed of something precious.
"Yeah, yeah, enough about the Johnson, what about the boobs?" you might
ask. Well for a movie whose main selling point is something the male
anatomy can't offer, Baywatch sure does hide away its women.
In an attempt to replicate the chemistry of Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill
in 21 Jump Street, this movie is all about Johnson and Zac Efron, whose Mitch Brody
is a disgraced former Olympic medalist forced to join the red-suited
lifeguards as his community service. While the pair indulge in gay panic
jokes, the women shuffle around in the background, struggling to be seen
behind their leading men's bulging biceps.
The irony of this is that Baywatch tries to sell us a message about male privilege, with Brody being offered multiple opportunities to progress despite constantly screwing up, while the far more qualified female lifeguards are passed over. But this is a crime the film itself is guilty of, as it sidelines its female stars in favour of Johnson and Efron. What's doubly annoying is that in the brief glimpses we see of these women above the neck they threaten to add some life to the film. Bollywood icon Priyanka Chopra is the standout as the film's villain, a ruthless councillor involved in drug smuggling. She's given crumbs to work with, but through sheer star power she kneads them into a full loaf, chewing up the screen every time she enters a scene, and reminding us that there's a whole world of stardom beyond the US. The big surprise is model turned actress Kelly Rohrbach, who displays a natural comic talent despite being given nothing remotely funny to work with. Her character is a mess, morphing from stereotypical blond bimbo to strong heroine from scene to scene as if the part is an amalgamation of two different script drafts. Alexandra Daddario and Ilfenesh Hadera meanwhile are required merely to stand to the left and right of Johnson, as if they're the world's hottest bodyguards.
As a comedy, Baywatch is unfeasibly unburdened with laughs.
Even the worst Adam Sandler vehicles produce one or two involuntary
guffaws, if only a muscle reaction your brain immediately scorns, but
Baywatch failed to produce as much as a mild snort from
either myself or anyone else who attended my screening. It's also a
half-assed thriller, and it fails to integrate any humour into its tedious
action sequences; it's like watching two separate movies, neither of which
justify their existence. Thank God for the fast forward button.
Directed by: Seth Gordon
Starring: Dwayne Johnson, Zac Efron, Alexandra Daddario,
Kelly Rohrbach, Priyanka Chopra, Ilfenesh Hadera, Jon Bass
Back in the '90s, before the internet beamed its world of smut into our homes, hormonal teenage boys had to make do with the Saturday teatime tradition of Baywatch to get their fill of female flesh. In anticipation of the obligatory slo-mo sequence of Pamela Anderson's cleavage bouncing in her red swimsuit like two bald midgets running a sack race, a lot of VCR pause buttons were worn out. But also fast forward buttons, as in between such mammary moments the show was the very definition of tedium. The new generation of sweaty palmed tykes who check out this feature film cash-in will likely hit the fast-forward button too, as Baywatch the movie is so unremittingly awful it may well turn its young male audience off boobs for life.
Here, Mitch Buchanan, the superhero lifeguard originally played by human meme David Hasselhoff (who of course turns up for an obligatory cameo here, along with former co-star Anderson, who has had so much work done at this point that she literally walks in slow motion now), is essayed by Dwayne Johnson in a demeaning piece of miscasting. Johnson's all-American sincerity, which usually brightens up every movie he appears in, is at odds with this film's snark, and hearing expletives come from his mouth is akin to stumbling across Jimmy Stewart's sex tape. Johnson is the guy you'd ask to pick up your kids from school when you get a flat tyre, or to take your wife to dinner when you're forced to work late. He has a rare old world innocence that seems out of step with these cynical times. That's why we love him, why he unites so many disparate viewers, and his role here feels like we're being robbed of something precious.
The irony of this is that Baywatch tries to sell us a message about male privilege, with Brody being offered multiple opportunities to progress despite constantly screwing up, while the far more qualified female lifeguards are passed over. But this is a crime the film itself is guilty of, as it sidelines its female stars in favour of Johnson and Efron. What's doubly annoying is that in the brief glimpses we see of these women above the neck they threaten to add some life to the film. Bollywood icon Priyanka Chopra is the standout as the film's villain, a ruthless councillor involved in drug smuggling. She's given crumbs to work with, but through sheer star power she kneads them into a full loaf, chewing up the screen every time she enters a scene, and reminding us that there's a whole world of stardom beyond the US. The big surprise is model turned actress Kelly Rohrbach, who displays a natural comic talent despite being given nothing remotely funny to work with. Her character is a mess, morphing from stereotypical blond bimbo to strong heroine from scene to scene as if the part is an amalgamation of two different script drafts. Alexandra Daddario and Ilfenesh Hadera meanwhile are required merely to stand to the left and right of Johnson, as if they're the world's hottest bodyguards.
Baywatch is on Prime Video UK
now.