Bullock is romance novelist Loretta Sage, who pens lurid adventure tales inspired by her past love of archaeology. As she puts it, “itās real history. I merely season it with a bit more nudity.” Alan Caprison (Tatum) is her dim-witted cover model, donning a ludicrous blonde wig and determined to maintain peopleās belief that heās a real hero. The release of Lorettaās latest novel The Lost City of D inspires eccentric billionaire Abigail Fairfax (Daniel Radcliffe) to kidnap her in the hope that she can lead him to the real lost city and its associated treasures. Alan sees a chance to find the real hero within and bring Loretta home.
Itās the perfect scaffolding for a silly adventure movie of the kind thatās really having a moment on the big screen of late, whether itās Uncharted, the surprisingly excellent recent Dora the Explorer film or any of those movies where The Rock wears khaki in a jungle. Sibling directing duo the Nee Brothers put the narrative pedal to the floor early on, with Alan and Loretta stranded together in the wilderness when the attempt to rescue her doesnāt quite go according to plan.Bullock holds the movie together with a performance of exquisite comic timing, saddled with a ludicrous, glittery pink one-piece which couldnāt be less suitable for the jungle. She has terrific comic chemistry with Tatum, who has found the perfect vehicle for the himbo charm he has so often harnessed on the big screen, including in the Magic Mike movies. You canāt decide whether you want to sleep with him or read him a bedtime story. He might be thick enough to comment that Loretta should “visit Ancient Greece” if she wants to relax, but he also radiates big-hearted warmth and is lovable enough that the budding romance between the duo is utterly believable.
The third key cast member is something of a wildcard, with Radcliffe again leaning in to his propensity for playing over-cranked weirdos. Itās a register in which the former boy wizard excels, giving Fairfax a jittery unpredictability which makes him as dangerous as he is funny. Even when his villainy goes up another level to inject further stakes into the third act, Radcliffeās intense mania finds room to accommodate it. Given his next role is as the musician Weird Al Yankovic, itās fair to say thereās plenty more room for Radcliffe to get strange on the big screen.
All of the central performers thrive in this world and are clearly having a ball tossing around the scriptās selection of one-liners. Thereās an improvisational feel to a lot of the comedy beats, but this manifests in a way that polishes and energises the script rather than overwhelming it in the way that the endless riffs of noughties Judd Apatow comedies often did. And when the time comes for things to blow up and spectacle to take centre stage, the Nee Brothers rise to that challenge as well. Thatās not to say that everything works. Lorettaās publicist and buddy Beth (DaāVine Joy Randolph) feels like a rather outdated example of the “Black best friend” trope, despite the strength and commitment of Randolphās fun performance. Thereās also something a little distasteful about the fact that natives of the island where the action takes place – the movie shot mostly in the Dominican Republic – are characterised as either corrupt or quaintly traditional.Issues aside, though, The Lost City is the sort of slightly old-fashioned, swooning slice of spectacle that Hollywood has lost sight of in recent decades amid the reliably ching-chinging cash registers of franchises. Itās a clownish adventure tale, with a romance between two preposterously beautiful people at its heart, and some stunning locations. After two years of intense anxiety and indoor confinement, thereās a real joy in keeping it simple.
The Lost City is in UK cinemas from 13th April.ā Thank you for visiting! If youād like to support our attempts to make a non-clickbaity movie website: Follow Film Stories on Twitter here, and on Facebook here. Buy our Film Stories and Film Stories Junior print magazines here. Become a Patron here.