Stream Online White House Down (2013)
- MOVIE page: White House Down (2013)
- Rate: (awaiting 5 votes) Your Rating: Saving vote... Deleting vote... /10 total (delete | history) Sorry, there was a problem MOVIEmeter: No change in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro. Director: Roland Emmerich Writer (WGA): James Vanderbilt (written by) Contact:View company contact information for White House Down on IMDbPro.Release Date:28 June 2013 (USA) See more
- Genre: Action | Drama | Thriller
- Runtime: 131 min
- Filming Location: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- Budget: $150,000,000 (estimated)
- Director: Roland Emmerich
- Stars: Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx, Maggie Gyllenhaal | See full cast and crew
- Original Music By: Harald Kloser Thomas Wanker (as Thomas Wander)
- Soundtrack: Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor
- Sound Mix: Dolby Digital | Datasat | SDDS
- Plot Keyword: President | White House | Secret Service | Black U.S. President | Terrorism
- James Vanderbilt (written by)
Plot: While on a tour of the White House with his young daughter, a Capitol policeman springs into action to save his child and protect the president from a heavily armed group of paramilitary invaders. Full summary » | »
Story: Capitol Policeman John Cale has just been denied his dream job with the Secret Service of protecting President James Sawyer. Not wanting to let down his little girl with the news, he takes her on a tour of the White House, when the complex is overtaken by a heavily armed paramilitary group. Now, with the nation's government falling into chaos and time running out, it's up to Cale to save the president, his daughter, and the country. Written byColumbia Pictures
Produced By:
- Reid Carolin known as executive producer
- Roland Emmerich known as producer
- Ute Emmerich known as executive producer
- Volker Engel known as co-producer
- Brad Fischer known as producer
- Larry J. Franco known as producer
- Laeta Kalogridis known as producer
- Harald Kloser known as producer
- James Vanderbilt known as producer
- Marc Weigert known as co-producer
- Channing Tatum known as Cale
- Jamie Foxx known as President Sawyer
- Maggie Gyllenhaal known as Finnerty
- Jason Clarke known as Stenz
- Richard Jenkins known as Raphelson
- Joey King known as Emily
- James Woods known as Walker
- Nicolas Wright known as Donnie the Guide
- Jimmi Simpson known as Tyler
- Michael Murphy known as Vice President Hammond
- Rachelle Lefevre known as Melanie
- Lance Reddick known as General Caulfield
- Matt Craven known as Agent Kellerman
- Jake Weber known as Agent Hope
- Peter Jacobson known as Wallace
- Barbara Williams known as Muriel Walker
- Kevin Rankin known as Killick
- Garcelle Beauvais known as Alison Sawyer
- Falk Hentschel known as Motts
- Romano Orzari known as Mulcahy
- Jackie Geary known as Jenna
- Andrew Simms known as Roger Skinner
- Catherine Lemieux known as Midwestern Woman
- Vincent Leclerc known as Agent Todd
- Andreas Apergis known as Ritter
- Victor Cornfoot known as Agent Reid
- Anatoly Zinoviev known as Vadim
- Lee Villeneuve known as Chen
- Patrick Sabongui known as Bobby
- Anthony Lemke known as Captain Hutton
- Kyle Gatehouse known as Conrad
- Yardly Kavanagh known as President's Secretary
- Andrew Shaver known as Young Agent
- Rhys Williams known as Sniper
- Kwasi Songui known as North Gate Guard
- Leni Parker known as Speaker's Assistant
- Faber Dewar known as Colonel Cameron
- Brent Skagford known as Marine One Pilot
- Todd van der Heyden known as Reporter in Helicopter
- Paul Van Der Heyden known as Helicopter Pilot
- Neil Napier known as Tank Commander
- Ahmed Mekallach known as Marine Guard
- Raphael Grosz-Harvey known as National Guardsman
- Chad Connell known as Gabriel Byrnes
- Mark Antony Krupa known as Naval Aide - Pentagon
- Patrick Costello known as NORAD Technician
- Ralph Prosper known as Washington Policeman
- Jennifer Morehouse known as Female Army Major
- Martin Thibaudeau known as Air Force Colonel
- Simon Gouveia known as Tank Gunner
- Richard Bradshaw known as Naval Commander
- Frank Cavallaro known as Reporter
- Lori Graham known as Reporter
- Barry Morgan known as Reporter
- Andrew Peplowski known as Reporter
- Timothy F. Sargeant known as Reporter
- Tarah Schwartz known as Reporter
- Dan Duran known as Reporter
- David Haydn-Jones known as Reporter
- Janette Luu known as Reporter
- Tamara Sutherland known as Reporter
- Seamus O'Regan known as Reporter
- Lauren Sanchez known as Reporter
- Chris Schauble known as Reporter
- Brooke Anderson known as Reporter
- Ben Mankiewicz known as Reporter
- John Hans Tester known as Reporter
- Dan Bingham known as Nuclear Scientist (uncredited)
- Colby Chartrand known as DC Sonic #1 (uncredited)
- Kren Clausen known as Secret Service Agent (uncredited)
- Stéphane Dargis known as Park Police (uncredited)
- Karl Dorcin known as Royal Army's Commander (uncredited)
- Mario Geoffrey known as Midwestern Father (uncredited)
- Frédéric Gilles known as French Reporter (uncredited)
- Jason Gosbee known as Secret Service Agent Green (uncredited)
- Jim Gunter known as Air Force Colonel (uncredited)
- Charles Jarman known as Radar Tech #1 (uncredited)
- Patrick Kerton known as Mercenary #2 (uncredited)
- Joey Klein known as TV Producer (uncredited)
- Maxime Laferriere known as Police Driver (uncredited)
- Tristan D. Lalla known as Pentagon Computer / Captain (uncredited)
- John MacDonald known as Security Guard #2 (uncredited)
- Serge Martineau known as 3 stars General / US Marine Corps, US Navy - Pentagon Command Center (uncredited)
- Alain Moussi known as Agent Reid's Partner (uncredited)
- Mizinga Mwinga known as Blackhawk Pilot #2 (uncredited)
- Simon Northwood known as DC Sonic #3 (uncredited)
- Griffin O'Connor known as Tourist #3 (uncredited)
- Louis Paquette known as DC Sonic #2 (uncredited)
- Stephan Parent known as Marine One Co-Pilot (uncredited)
- Lindsay Owen Pierre known as F-22 Pilot (uncredited)
- Benoit Priest known as Bad Ass Crowd (uncredited)
- Marc Primeau known as Brave Tourist (uncredited)
- Diezel Ramos known as Secret service agent (uncredited)
- Shiva Safari known as Persian News Reporter (uncredited)
- Darryl Scheelar known as DC Sonic #5 (uncredited)
- Mélodie Simard known as Schoolgirl (uncredited)
- Maurizio Terrazzano known as Blackhawk Pilot #3 (uncredited)
- Tony Truax known as Office Worker (uncredited)
- Holden Wong known as Cantonese Reporter (uncredited)
Production Companies:
- Mythology Entertainment (II)
- Centropolis Entertainment
- Iron Horse Entertainment (II)
MPAA: Rated PG-13 for prolonged sequences of action and violence including intense gunfire and explosions, some language and a brief sexual image.
White House Down (2013) Review by jeddjong from Singapore
After taking a short detour into the realm of speculative costume dramawith 2011's Anonymous, director Roland Emmerich is back to doing whathe does best: dealing out copious amounts of punishment to 1600 Penn.After all, he blew it to smithereens with an alien death ray inIndependence Day and smashed an aircraft carrier into its south porticoin 2012. It seemed inevitable that the maven of large-scale cinematicdestruction would eventually make a film centering on the D.C.landmark.
U.S. Capitol Police Officer John Cale (Tatum), with his daughter Emily(King) in tow, heads to the White House for a job interview, hoping tobecome a Secret Service Agent. Carol Finnerty (Gyllenhaal), herself aSecret Service Agent and John's former schoolmate, deems him unworthy.While taking a tour of the place after his rejection, John and Emilysuddenly find themselves, along with other tourists and staffers, heldhostage. A paramilitary group comprised of various dangerous miscreantsand led by hardened mercenary Emil Stenz (Clarke) begins a hostiletakeover of the White House. John finds himself having to protectPresident James Sawyer (Foxx), his daughter and the various otherscaught in the fray as a national crisis swiftly and violently unfolds.
A summer blockbuster best described as "Air Force One meets Die Hard,with Magic Mike teaming up with President Django" just has to beentertaining no two ways about it. And by gosh, White House Down isall kinds of entertaining. Sure, its PG-13 rating might disappoint fansof hardcore action and it's not going to start a renaissance of '80s-style action extravaganzas anytime soon, but this is the kind of moviewhich has the Presidential limousine drifting across the White Houselawn with the baddies in pursuit. I can tell you there's an audiencefor that. James Vanderbilt's screenplay seems to have been written withjust the right amount of self-awareness: the movie revels in itsrelative absurdity like a toddler in a ball pit and has a lot of funwith the premise, while stopping a safe distance short of mocking itsaudience.
Duelling movies aren't new; moviegoers have borne witness to suchbattles as Dante's Peak vs. Volcano, A Bug's Life vs. Antz and DeepImpact vs. Armageddon. It's only fair that White House Down be comparedto Olympus Has Fallen, 2013's other movie about a terrorist attack onthe Executive Mansion. While it doesn't have the cooler title, WhiteHouse Down does have more lavish production values and being a RolandEmmerich picture, has lots of stuff going boom. White House Down alsodoesn't take itself as seriously, at times it's almost a buddy moviebut with the Prez as the buddy. White House Down makes better use ofits setting and the film features some very realistic facsimiles of therooms, halls and other areas of 1600 Penn. However, the afore-mentionedPG-13 rating means the violence in this one is of a less visceralvariety and while the computer-generated imagery is done better here,it's still noticeable - particularly during the aerial sequences.
Roland Emmerich's films are known as much for their "casts ofthousands" as for their big-budget spectacle. While there aren't asmany characters here as in, say, 2012, there still are a good number ofplayers to juggle. Channing Tatum's protagonist is idealistic ratherthan world-weary and he seems to be having more fun playing the actionhero here than he did in the first G.I. JOE movie. Jamie Foxx and Tatummake for a decent action flick double act, but Foxx just doesn't comeoff as presidential enough, though he makes up for his lack of adignified air with cheesy/enjoyable moments like handling a rocketlauncher and yelling at terrorists not to touch his precious AirJordans.
While this isn't a realistic movie by any stretch, the villains in thisone somehow come off as more credible than the North Korean terroristsin Olympus Has Fallen. Jason Clarke is believable, scary even as atough, scruffy former Delta Force soldier-turned coldblooded gun forhire. Jimmi Simpson is a hoot as a campy, bespectacled "evil hacker"stereotype who declares "Skip Tyler is in!" and seizes control of thenation's defense systems. Joey King gets to be more than just the"kidnapped daughter" and is something of an important supportingcharacter. While Maggie Gyllenhaal doesn't get lots to do standingaround in the Pentagon's situation room, at least she isn't relegatedto the role of disposable love interest. Veteran actors James Woods andRichard Jenkins are also on hand to lend the actioner some gravitas,and Nicolas Wright as the comic relief tour guide is, refreshinglyenough, not annoying.
Emmerich has never been a critic's darling, but his films usuallypossess some sort of mass appeal and that's in full force here. Many ofhis films are set in multiple locations across the world, but the focuson the titular location actually prevents the story from feelingscattershot, and outlandish, exciting action sequences are not in shortsupply. And in this era of action thrillers being too self- serious,it's good that this strikes an adequate balance of intense moments andlevity to not come off as a downer, but as a good popcorn- munchin'time.
For F*** Magazine
White House Down (2013) Review by moviexclusive from Singapore
Forever etching his name on the 'blacklist' of the highest office inWashington, Roland Emmerich is back at destroying the officialresidence of the President of the United States. Alas, Emmerich hasbeen beaten at his own game, his White House under siege premise comingless than six months after the similarly-themed 'Olympus Has Fallen'.Besides cast and character, both are essentially variations of the samemovie - or to sum it up succinctly, 'Die Hard' on 1600 PennsylvaniaAvenue. And having lost the novelty factor to 'Olympus', what mattersis only whether it is in fact a better movie than its predecessor, towhich our answer is unfortunately a resounding no.
Yes, despite a bigger budget and perhaps more bankable lead stars(Channing Tatum and Jamie Foxx are still surer box-office bets thanGerard Butler going by their respective track records), 'White HouseDown' is a disappointing letdown. To be fair, that ain't the fault ofTatum and Foxx, both of whom are the saving graces of an otherwiseembarrassing exercise in hokum; instead, Emmerich and his screenwriterJames Vanderbilt are squarely to blame here, the latter for throwingany semblance of logic out the window and the former for trying toohard to emulate Michael Bay.
Whereas 'Olympus' had the real-life threat of the North Koreans to lendsome authenticity, Vanderbilt engenders none with his far-fetchedpremise of the President's Head of Secret Service, Walker (JamesWoods), recruiting a hodgepodge bunch of right-wing ex-militaryfundamentalists to kidnap the President and exploit his nuclear arsenalso as to wipe out America's enemies in the Middle East (here's lookingat you, Teheran) off the map. The trigger for that? A G8 speech wherecurrent President, James Sawyer (Foxx), essentially tells the worldthat the U.S. will be pursuing peace diplomacy by taking the first stepto lay down its weapons.
Despite a backstory that tries to explain Walker's motivations, thereis little coherence to just how the Head of the President's SecretService detail would be so compelled to attempt such an act of treason,let alone assemble a ragtag team of militarists with past criminalrecords and sneak them into the White House to aid his 'noble' cause.Ditto for the likelihood that a hacker, however brilliant he might be,could simply run a programme to crack the NSA's firewalls without evenso much as alerting anyone else in the process - and may we add therebyprecipitating a thoroughly laughable chain of swearing-ins that goesfrom the Vice-President to the Speaker of Parliament Raphelson (RichardJenkins). If you thought 'Olympus' was just implausible, then 'WhiteHouse Down' pretty much operates on its own system of reasoning.
Further turning the proceedings to farce is the buddy team of aspiringSecret Service agent John Cale (Tatum) and President Sawyer. A classiccase of the right guy in the wrong place at the wrong time, Cale findshimself rising to the call of duty when the terrorists launch theirattack just as he and his daughter Emily (Joey King) are on tour in theWhite House. But instead of repeating the formula of one man saving theday (or the President for that matter), Vanderbilt introduces a twistto the dynamics between Cale and Sawyer by turning them into partners -though how much it really does veer from the earlier cliché isquestionable.
Nonetheless, Tatum and Foxx make a pleasantly amusing pair and are -truth be told - the best things that the movie has going for it. Butthe immediate trade-off of injecting comedy into a premise thatintuitively demands a certain degree of solemnity is that you cannotquite take anything else that happens in it seriously afterwards.Nowhere is this more evident than in an utterly ludicrous sequencewhere Cale and Sawyer are in the President's limousine driving roundand round the fountain in the middle of the White House lawn whilebeing chased by the bad guys, the sheer stupidity of it matched by thefact that Sawyer is in the meantime figuring out how to assemble a minirocket launcher in the back seat.
Whereas 'Olympus' kept its pacing taut by emphasising the gravity ofthe threat facing the nation, there is nary a frisson of tension evenas Walker comes dangerously close to acquiring the President's nuclearcommandership. Simply put, the self-aware humour that is the onlyreason why the movie remains Streamingable sits at odds with theself-serious tone in the last third of the film, and no number offighter planes nor surface-to-air missiles can regain the credibilityof its premise.
It doesn't help that the action, which consists largely of close combatfights, is surprisingly lacklustre, choreographed with neither finessenor technique to distinguish one from the other. Wherever Emmerich getsthe opportunity in the screenplay to stage the action against a widercanvas, he squanders that chance to make it count, the surfeit of CGIand excess making for a toxic combination that renders what is shownlittle more than an afterthought. Indeed, a similar sequence as that in'Olympus' where the Special Forces attempt to land on the roof of theWhite House from helicopters unfolds with so little excitement that itmight as well have been cut out altogether.
Therein lies perhaps the biggest problem with 'White House Down' - evenas a summer popcorn flick, it just isn't thrilling enough. Emmerichtries to keep every frame busy - hence the countless number of timesTatum leaps over couches or slides over tables - but the action is justloud, dumb and plain boring. Only the humour between Tatum and Foxxmanages to be entertaining, though it's hard not to regard the movie asfarce afterwards. Call us biased, but we like our White House undersiege thrillers to be hard-hitting, intense and gripping, none of whichcan be used to describe 'White House Down'.
- www.moviexclusive.com
White House Down (2013) Review by janmejay-vyas from United States
I managed to catch an advance screening of this Roland Emmerichdirected flick in the theaters last Tuursday. I particularly did nothave any high expectations going into this movie partly because thedirector's previous duds and also because the trailer didn'tparticularly excite me. But, one thing Emmerich does is that he alwaysmounts his films on a grand scale and I'm guessing most of you willagree with me on that. Be it, Independence Day, The Day After Tomorrowor 2012, you will always see a grand spectacle unfolding with a largerthan life projection, and White House Down is not much different inthat aspect.
So you have John Cale (Channing Tatum) vying for his dream job with theSecret Service protecting the President of United States (Jamie Foxx)for which he takes along his high on political IQ, daughter Emily (JoeyKing) for an interview in the White House. As indicated by the title ofthe movie, the timing could not have been any better as within minutesthe building is taken down and held hostage by heavily armed in-houseterrorists, who have their own personal agendas on mind. The initialscenes manage to get your attention with some nicely executed scenes ofthe siege of the most important building of the world. But alas, itsall downhill from here. Clearly, this is not the place to ask forreasoning and logic. An event of such a magnitude, needs to have a verystrong intent but when the purpose is gradually revealed you seem tofeel simply let down and you seem to ask this question "Do the makersfeel their audience is so stupid?" None of the characters stand out.I'm not asking a Joker show here but at least the antagonist needs tohave his motive clear. Twists appear completely out of the blue, I meanit should be a good thing but there should always be a goodjustification so that all the bits and pieces join together to make thetwist believable. Simply saying how would you react if Alfred from theBatman trilogy turned out to be the villain in the last scene.
Movies in which action does most of the talking, need to have deeprooted and believable characters, and this starts from the writingstage till the final casting but unfortunately this is one of theweakest aspects of the movie. I mean a simple way to gauge that wouldbe to ask yourself, how badly you want the villain killed or the lovestory to end on a positive note or the leading man bash up theantagonist in the final act. In this movie, I felt none of those. Icouldn't care less about any of the characters on screen, whateverhappens I just want the lights back on ASAP, and that's not a good signfor any movie. On a positive note, you take back a couple of characterslike Donnie (the guide) and Emily (Cale's daughter). Nicolas Wright asDonnie, the guide taking visitors on a trip inside the White House getshis timing right in most of the comic scenes he has particularly in thescene where Emily answers his questions beforehand or the scene wherehe takes a dig at blowing of White House in Roland's previous filmIndependence Day.
That's the only thing you take back from an otherwise overblown, outrightly dumb and a flat film which offers nothing new only other thatthe White House being blown to bits. At a runtime of almost 130minutes, it feels long, tiring and chances are it'll leave you with amigraine. I would definitely not recommend it to anyone, it's not worththe price of a ticket. Grab a DVD cuddle up in your couch and Streaming theIndependence Day again, it'll definitely be the two hours well spent.
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