Went to an early screening last night. Wow. What a ride.
What the movie does well, it does it well to the extreme. The shortcomings don't rate much lower than sort of average, so the movie doesn't suffer as much from them. Gerard Butler's Mike Banning isn't the deepest of characters. The opening sequence doesn't do much to garner sympathy, but does a nice job of setting up his relationships with the First Family (particularly the President's son) and his coworkers in the Secret Service. I do like the fact that he doesn't have the cliched aftermath of losing his wife and abandoning his profession altogether (the story takes place 18 months after the opening). Their relationship is strained, but the foundation is still strong, and he's been transferred. He actually wants back in the Secret Service. Sympathy for his character comes from watching him struggle throughout the movie to keep everything from sinking into total chaos. The other characters aren't the deepest, either, but enjoy enough personality to maintain a third dimension.
The plot is simple, but it doesn't matter. You actually know the motives up front, and see twists coming. The way the movie's crafted, that's sort of the point. The idea is more about the devastation and the struggle on both sides of the fight. And it is glorious. The action is phenomenal. The one liners and takedowns drew constant laughs, cheers, and clapping throughout the movie. Antoine Fuqua really makes you hate the antagonists upfront, right from their initial attack on the White House. And it's not just the White House. They aim (and succeed) to kill as many bystanders and civilians as possible with that C-130 of theirs flying over The Mall and streets of DC.
There are some plot holes with regard to tactics on both sides, levels of security on Pennsylvania Avenue, and decision-making. But those don't diminish the experience. My only real complaint was a slight over-jingoistic tone with waving flags playing over the opening and end credits. Artistically, they distract so much from the image of the tattered flag falling from the White House roof after it's been taken.
Bottom line, if you are in that group that likes Die Hard, Under Siege, Air Force One, and even The Bodyguard, than this movie will make you squeal with joy. Even if those aren't your things, Gerard Butler will make you like them.
BAD-****ING-ASS
8.5/10
EDIT: I don't really buy many movies anymore. The Dark Knight Rises and The Avengers have been the only two in the last 18 months, and that was just this week. If the extra features are there on the Blu-Ray, I'll certainly shell out for this one.