| Review Date: Director: John McTiernan Writer: Larry Ferguson, John Pogue Producers: John McTiernan, Charles Roven, Beau St-Clair Actors: Chris Klein as Jonathan Cross LL Cool J as Marcus Ridley Jean Reno as Alexi Petrovich |
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What else? Oh yeah, the story. The plotline in this film is predictable, boring, stupid and packed with holes. The bad guys are the same, with no apparent skills in covering up their bad guy tracks either. (everybody knows what they’re up to) The film also sports one of the worst editing jobs that I’ve seen in quite some time, with many of them being too quick to even pick up the action. The games themselves are also unexciting, with more quick cuts and little suspense or interest in any of their outcomes. McTiernan also likes to focus on the band during the games, the reporters (especially this one super-annoying dude who could not have been any more annoying if he tried), money being counted and the ratings meter going up every second (wow, how exciting…). But the ultimate bad choice in this film is a sequence in which the entire screen is in night-vision green for about 5-10 minutes. Why, you might ask? I have no idea!! The tactic might’ve been cute if used for a few seconds, but here we get car chases, gun shots, motorcycles stunts all shown to us through an obvious digital camera, in green…and blurry! All I could say while watching that was, “What the hell were these people thinking?” It felt like amateur hour at the local community college with a few drunk students going out into the desert and fooling around with their video cameras. The scene also features Klein and LL apparently doing 120MPH on a motorcycle, but we as an audience, cannot sense any of that rush, but can definitely imagine them sitting in a studio lot somewhere, with a wind machine blowing really hard in their faces. Yawn.
The studio should be ashamed of releasing a film in such a horrible state. Having already been pushed back from its original release date in 2001, and removed of all its bloodier violence, sex scenes and nudity (so you cast Romjin-Stamos for her good looks, but you have her clothed and masked throughout the entire movie…makes sense to me!), this flick feels like a turd that nobody ever bothered to clean off the floor and just ended up getting stinkier and stinkier and stinkier. But you know me…I try to find “good” elements in all films and I will give this movie super-tiny props for a decent soundtrack, a potentially cool premise in the game, some interesting violent “take-outs” during the matches, a solid opening sequence and much (unintended) humor! It’s not necessarily as “incoherent” as some are making it out to be (although I still have no idea who Sergei was), but it’s definitely a bad movie, through and through. And the worst part about a movie like this is that it doesn’t even achieve its primary goal, which I assume was…to entertain.