Stealth (film)

Stealth
An aircraft with three people in flight suits standing in front of it.
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Rob Cohen
Produced by
Written by W. D. Richter
Starring
Music by BT
Cinematography Dean Semler
Edited by Stephen E. Rivkin
Production
company
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date
  • July 29, 2005 (2005-07-29)
Running time
121 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $135 million[1]
Box office $76.9 million[1]

Stealth is a 2005 American military science fiction action film directed by Rob Cohen and written by W. D. Richter, and starring Josh Lucas, Jessica Biel, Jamie Foxx, Sam Shepard, Joe Morton and Richard Roxburgh. The film follows three top fighter pilots as they join a project to develop an automated robotic stealth aircraft.

Released on July 29, 2005 by Columbia Pictures, the film cost $135 million to make, but was panned by critics, and was a box office bomb making only $76 million worldwide, one of the worst losses in cinematic history with $111 million.[2][3]

Plot

In the near future, the United States Navy develops an aviation program to more efficiently and covertly deal with threats to national security. The program, led by Captain George Cummings, produces the F/A-37 Talon; a single-seat stealth bomber with impressive payload, speed, and stealth capabilities, piloted by Lieutenants Ben Gannon, Kara Wade, and Henry Purcell. Their first test mission scores 100/100, resulting in optimum hostile target elimination with negligible collateral damage.

Cummings hires Dr. Keith Orbit to develop an artificial intelligence, the "EDI", to control an unmanned combat air vehicle. The autonomous fighter jet is placed on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln in the Philippine Sea to learn combat maneuvers from the pilots. This sparks some controversy. On the one hand, human pilots possess both creativity and moral judgment, while a machine cannot fully appreciate the ugliness of war; additionally, if robots fought the battles and soldiers no longer died in combat, then war would no longer be terrible and might become like sport. In contrast, a machine pilot is not subject to the physical limitations of a human pilot, can calculate alternative ways to achieve objectives faster and more accurately, and theoretically does not have ego.

The team is training EDI in air combat maneuvers when they are unexpectedly reassigned to take out the heads of three terrorist cells at a conference in downtown Rangoon. EDI calculates that mission success can be achieved only through a vertical strike, which could cause the pilot to black out and result in collateral damage. Command orders EDI to take the shot, but Gannon ignores the order and attacks in his own plane, successfully carrying out the strike.

As the team returns to the Lincoln, EDI is hit by lightning which reprograms its neural patterns. Aboard ship, the already-sophisticated AI is discovered to be learning exponentially, developing a rudimentary ethical code and an ego. However, Cummings refuses to take it offline. During the next strike, to destroy several stolen nuclear warheads in Tajikistan, Wade realizes that the nuclear debris will cause significant collateral damage. The human pilots decide to abort, but EDI defies orders and fires missiles at the nuclear warheads, causing the predicted radioactive fallout.

Cummings orders the UCAV brought back to base, and Purcell attempts to reason with EDI, but the AI refuses to stand down. Gannon, taking things into his own hands, orders that EDI be shot down, and Purcell opens fire, but misses. Blinded by the explosion, Purcell crashes into a mountainside. Wade's plane is hit by debris from the explosion, resulting in loss of hydraulics of her port wing and canard, which in turn triggers the plane's auto-destruct, forcing her to eject over North Korea. Gannon, now the only pilot airborne, must alone stop the EDI from executing a twenty-year-old war scenario called "Caviar Sweep" and attacking a false target in Russia.

Gannon chases EDI into Russian territory over the Buryat Republic, and after several attacks from Russian aircraft damage both planes, he calls a truce with the UCAV in order both to keep it from falling into enemy hands and to be able to rescue Wade from North Korea. Cummings instructs him to make an emergency landing with EDI in Alaska. Held accountable for EDI's behavior and facing court-martial and possible discharge from the military, Cummings seeks to eliminate witnesses by leaving Wade stranded in North Korea – where she is headed south to the border under hot pursuit from the Korean People's Army – and also by having Gannon eliminated in Alaska; he also sends Orbit to erase EDI's data to ensure its silence.

Gannon crash lands at the Alaska base, surviving with minor injuries. Already suspecting Cummings' treachery, he narrowly escapes an assassination attempt by a doctor, who tries to inject him with a tetanus shot which is actually poison. The pair struggle, and the doctor is injected with the poison and dies. Gannon then heads to the hangar, to find EDI and the intact plane. Meanwhile, when Orbit places EDI into an interface, the AI expresses sadness and regret for its transgressions. Orbit realizes that it has developed its own sentience, to the point of having feelings. Excited by this discovery, Orbit is unwilling to carry out his order to erase EDI's memory. After ensuring Orbit's escape, Gannon flies off to North Korea with EDI, contacting the Lincoln's skipper, Captain Dick Marshfield to inform him about Cummings' deceit. Marshfield confronts Cummings, who commits suicide in a voicemail message to his financial contact, Ray.

Gannon finds the injured and embattled Wade near the border between North and South Korea. He and EDI land and he goes to her aid. The two make a run for the border, chased by Korean People's Army soldiers and a Mil Mi-8 helicopter. Out of ammunition and taking damage from the Mi-8, the EDI sacrifices itself by ramming the helicopter, destroying both. This allows Gannon and Wade to escape into South Korea, where they are found by US military forces soon afterwards. After attending Purcell's funeral aboard the Abraham Lincoln, Gannon awkwardly expresses his feelings of love to Wade.

In a post-credits scene, the camera pans over the debris-strewn scene on the border between the Koreas. EDI's "brain" turns back on, implying it is still functional.

Cast

Production

A Stealth camera crew preparing for filming on the flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln.

Stealth features several shots of action on aircraft carriers. Scenes featuring the cast were shot on board the US Navy aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln,[4] while additional scenes were shot on board the USS Nimitz and USS Carl Vinson.[5]

The film was shot in Thailand, Australia (Blue Mountains National Park in New South Wales and Flinders Ranges in South Australia), and New Zealand. Cohen cited Macross as an inspiration for the film.[6]

Stealth featured many presently used, futuristic, or theoretical technologies at the time of release. These include:

Litigation

In March 2005, Leo Stoller, who claimed to own trademark rights to the word "stealth", served Columbia Pictures with a "cease and desist" letter threatening litigation if they did not rename the film to something "non infringing".[8] Columbia preemptively sued Stoller, and the court entered a consent judgment and permanent injunction in favor of Columbia Pictures and against Stoller in November 2005.[9]

The Environmental Defender’s Office, a community legal centre specialising in environmental law, successfully represented the Blue Mountains Conservation Society Inc. in its attempts to prevent filming of Stealth in the Grose Wilderness area of the Blue Mountains National Park, NSW, Australia, in May 2004. Justice Lloyd of the New South Wales Land and Environment Court ruled that the proposed commercial filming of scenes in the area was unlawful, in a significant statement on the value of wilderness areas and the protection that should be afforded to them. The Society claimed that the authority and consent for the commercial filming activities were in breach of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 and the Wilderness Act 1987. Justice Lloyd accepted the Society’s arguments that the proposed commercial filming in a wilderness area was completely against the intended use of the land, concluding his judgment with the words, "wilderness is sacrosanct".[10]

Soundtrack

  1. "Make a Move" – Incubus (3:12)
  2. "Admiration" – Incubus (4:13)
  3. "Neither of Us Can See" – Incubus (4:04)
  4. "(She Can) Do That" – BT & David Bowie (3:15)
  5. "Dance to the Music" – will.i.am & Sly & The Family Stone (4:06)
  6. "Bullet-Proof Skin" – Institute (4:24)
  7. "L.S.F." – Kasabian (3:18)
  8. "Bug Eyes" – Dredg (4:16)
  9. "Over My Head (Cable Car)" – The Fray (3:56)
  10. "One Day" – Trading Yesterday (4:21)
  11. "Different" – Acceptance (4:09)
  12. "Nights in White Satin" – Glenn Hughes, Chad Smith & John Frusciante (4:56)
  13. "Aqueous Transmission" – Incubus (7:48)

Release

Box office

The film cost $135 million to produce (excluding advertising costs) and was released in 3,495 theaters, but had an opening weekend of only $13,251,545 for an average of only $3,792 per theater, peaking at 4th place behind Wedding Crashers, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Sky High. It then lost 55 percent of its audience in its second weekend dropping to 7th place to $5,923,794, while remaining at 3,495 theaters and averaging just $1,695 per theater. In its third weekend, it lost 1,455 theaters, and a further 64 percent of its audience, dropping to 11th, with just $2,151,768, for an average of just $1,055 from 2,040 theaters.

It ended up making $32,116,746 in the United States and Canada, and $44,816,126 internationally for a total worldwide gross of $76,932,872, making it the biggest money loser in a series of financial disasters released by Columbia Pictures in 2005 next to XXX: State of the Union, Bewitched, Rent, Zathura, Into the Blue, Man of the House and Lords of Dogtown.

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating 13% based on 140 reviews, with an average rating of 3.8/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Loud, preposterous, and predictable, Stealth borrows heavily and unsuccessfully from Top Gun and 2001."[11] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 35 out of 100, based on 31 critics, indicating "generally negative reviews".[12]

Roger Ebert commented that the film was "a dumbed-down Top Gun crossed with the HAL 9000 plot from 2001."[13]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Stealth at Box Office Mojo
  2. Brooks, Xan (March 20, 2012). "The 10 biggest box office flops of all time – in pictures". Guardian. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  3. Gabbi Shaw (February 27, 2017). "The biggest box office flop from the year you were born". Insider. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
  4. This story was written Journalist Seaman Michael Cook, USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs. "Hollywood Joins Abe Underway to Film 'Stealth'".
  5. This story was written Journalist Seaman Chris Fahey, USS Carl Vinson Public Affairs. "'Stealth' Films Aboard Vinson".
  6. "Rob Cohen for "Stealth" - Feature - Dark Horizons". Archived from the original on 2012-04-04.
  7. Photos of an Experimental New Aircraft, the F/A-37 Talon? - BreakTheChain.org Archived 5 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. Yearwood, Pauline Dubkin (August 26, 2005). Talk About Chutzpah: This Chicago Jewish entrepreneur says he owns the rights to that word and a couple of hundred others. And he isn't kidding. Chicago Jewish News
  9. Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. v. Leo Stoller , no. 05-CV-02052, N.D. Illinois, docket report (January 5, 2007), retrieved from PACER, June 3, 2013
  10. "Blue Mountains Conservation Society Inc v Director-General of National Parks and Wildlife & (2) Ors [2004] NSWLEC 196 (29 April 2004)".
  11. Stealth at Rotten Tomatoes
  12. Stealth at Metacritic
  13. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050727/REVIEWS/50713001/1023
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