'Atlas Shrugged' is back! With a whole new cast! And you know what that means - that's right,
more labored, tortured ideological messaging!
Atlas Shrugged Part II: The Strike Atlas Distribution Company
Director: John Putch
Screenplay: Duke Sandefur, Brian Patrick O'Toole and Duncan Scott, based on the novel Atlas
Shrugged, by Ayn Rand
Starring: Samantha Mathis, Jason Beghe, Esai Morales, Patrick Fabian, Kim Rhodes, Richard
T. Jones, Paul McCrane, Diedrich Bader, Ray Wise and D.B. Sweeney
Rated PG-13 / 1 hour, 52 minutes
(out of four)
Well, we can say this, at least: Atlas Shrugged Part II: The Strike does right by its creator. Its
writing is clumsy, its characters depthless, its plotting tedious, its commentary didactic and
preachy. Perhaps anyone with low enough literary standards to enjoy Ayn Rand's prose
(regardless of politics) may not have any problem getting through, and appreciating, this movie.
But despite greater production values this time around, The Strike is its predecessor's equal in
terms of cinematic ineptitude.
Part I came out last spring, and was such a rousing success that the entire cast bailed on the
sequel despite an increased budget. Which is just as well, because the crew is also new, the
producers plowing forward without the creative team from the first film and picking up right
where they left off. The difference - in the writing, the directing, the acting - is negligible. This
entry still has that same made-for-TV quality, only with more expensive and at times elaborate
production design, which is impressive in the way you might think of a Vegas hotel. Stylish and
flashy in the cheapest way possible.
It says something about the standards of this series that there can be such extreme turnover both
behind and in front of the camera without any noticeable difference. To Part II's benefit (if not
its credit), that allows us to transition pretty seamlessly into the second part of the story. The first
film ended with beleaguered oil man Ellis Wyatt setting his oil fields aflame and disappearing,
joining the rest of the nation's best and brightest in self-determined exile.
His absence leaves our heroine Dagny Taggart in dire straits, and indeed as the story continues in
Part II, she's struggling to stay afloat, her innovations - and her spirit! - getting trampled by the
one-dimensionally tyrannical, regulation-happy, innovation-hating government and its allies. As
the brains of Taggart Transcontinental, she's trying to keep her railroad going - notably the
infamous John Galt Line - but the world is closing in on her. Her spineless brother James
(Patrick Fabian), the face and public image of the company, isn't helping matters.
Aside from all that, Dagny's attention has been redirected toward a mysterious motor - far more
advanced than anything currently in use - that could presumably provide the world with an
endless supply of energy. The only mystery is finding the man who designed the thing - and
even that remains a mystery only because Dagny is apparently too dense to figure out the
obvious.
Meanwhile, the government is going after fellow
Tortured Innovator Hank Rearden, the head of Rearden Steel who refuses to comply with a new
government edict forcing companies to sell to any and all buyers, governments included.
The political workings in the script are as dull as any of the Trade Federation nonsense in the
Star Wars prequels, and written with just as much wit. The whole thing is far too humorless to
work as satire (undercutting any claim of genuine commentary) and too flat and lethargic to
work dramatically. Consider the scenes between Dagny and Rearden - who are sleeping together
despite sharing an utter lack of sexual chemistry. I mean, the least director John Putch could
have done is provide some sort of visceral, sensual drive on which the rest of the movie could
coast. But no, even the luridness is beyond dull.
I mentioned the casting, or re-casting, of the roles this time around - but I must confess, this cast
makes for a decidedly goofy bunch of recognizable C-listers. Biff from Back to the Future! The
dad from Family Ties! The bald doctor from E.R.! That Guy from Drew Carey and Office Space
and Napoleon Dynamite! The guy from Penn & Teller! (No, not that one, the other one. The one
who doesn't talk.)
But most important, of course, are Dagny and Rearden. And indeed they make for a confounding
couple. In Part I, Dagny was played by Taylor Schilling, who was 26 at the time. In Part II, the
role is played by Samantha Mathis, who is 42 - and yes, post-production team, looks it, despite
all your embarrassing attempts at airbrushing. But the age difference isn't the problem - it's the
performance. Mathis makes a series of baffling acting decisions that don't make any sense; at
times it honestly seems like the cameraman caught her unaware in an awkward moment. Her
facial expressions and body language shift nonsensically from shot to shot.
Then there's Jason Beghe, who plays Rearden as if he's playing Matt Dillon doing an impression
of Christian Bale's Batman. Or maybe the other way around. Either way, gravitas has rarely been
performed with such a lack of nuance.
I suppose that description is emblematic of The Strike as a whole - a feeble attempt at sober,
elegant cinematic gravitas that fails to grasp even the slightest hint of how to actually be taken
seriously.