They don't make movies like Spartan (2004) anymore. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say, they aren't making movies like Spartan at the moment. In preparing for this review I listened to a podcast that noted the movie came out at the wrong time. Had it come out eight years earlier, or eight years later, it might have been a success.
If you don't remember the movie at all, you're forgiven. I'm not sure when I became aware of it. When I think Mamet, I think of The Untouchables, and when I think of Val Kilmer of think of, well, lots of things: Batman Forever, Tombstone, Top Gun, etc. Spartan was never on my radar.
Here Kilmer plays Scott, a former Marine who trains special forces recruits when he's not working with the Secret Service as some sort of consultant. When "The Girl" is kidnapped because of an agent's negligence, he's brought in to find her. It's only later we learn that "The Girl" is actually the President's daughter.
There are several major twists and feints along the way that I won't spoil here. But the movie opens with high tension that gradually increases over the short runtime. It. Never. Lets. Up. Most reviews complain that Scott has no personality and that his character development feels like an afterthought. I would argue that no professional in that situation would emote or reveal much of his personal life. It's all about the job. Any change or growth has must be wrung out of him, which is what the twists in the plot serve to do.
I haven't seen Mamet's Wag The Dog, but I get the impression that he's never thought highly of politicians or the media. Here the President's daughter is seen as a pawn in his reelection game and the media are the dupes who play along. Those in the system are hopelessly corrupt. It's only the men and women with their boots on the ground who are admirable, and the kidnapped girl who has the most humanity.
So while the man with a specific set of skills on a mission movie might be having a moment, this sort of cynicism about the powers that be is certainly out of vogue. I don't think that Mamet (who wrote and directed) was trying to make a point. But I don't know that he wasn't. And that's the way I like it. The story does what it needs to do, and delivers on what it what promised me.
Hey Amazon, The Terminal List was pretty good. How about remaking Spartan as a TV series?