‘XXX’ short on plot, long on action
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Once in a while, Hollywood comes up with what should be a great
idea. I imagine the “pitch” meeting for “XXX” resulted in much
self-congratulatory backslapping as the producers and studio
executives pronounced themselves marketing geniuses and true
visionaries. Their simple plan consisted of ripping off the proven
James Bond formula right down to “M” and “Q” substitutes, adding a
muscular, shaved head action figure look alike (Vin Diesel), an
insane villain bent on world domination, lots of explosions and chase
sequences and a grinding heavy metal soundtrack. Surely this potent
combination would produce a guaranteed instant blockbuster.
The only problem is, I almost completely covered all of the plot
elements in the above paragraph. From this germ of an idea, the
barest skeleton of a script was fashioned. Given the film’s target
demographic (teenagers), the ratio of explosions to dialogue and the
recent success of the last Vin Diesel vehicle, “The Fast and the
Furious,” I expect “XXX” to be one of the most commercially
successful films of the summer despite it’s glaring shortcomings.
Diesel plays Xander Cage, a world-famous extreme sports athlete
and daredevil. The “M” character in is Gibbons, a National Security
Agency spymaster with a scarred face played by Samuel L. Jackson.
After a videotaped very public stunt involving a stolen Corvette,
Gibbons recruits Cage for deep cover work as an alternative to some
serious jail time.
Shot on location in Prague, the scenery is one of the most
enjoyable aspects of “XXX.” Diesel has great screen presence and
genuine star power. As in “The Fast and the Furious,” he competently
delivers throwaway one-liners, glowers menacingly and displays his
impressive physique to good advantage. Unfortunately, the limp
dialogue and derivative plot does not require him to do much else.
Jackson delivers his usual solid performance.
The plot seems to exist only to string together the many stunts
and special effects. However, even for this genre, many of the stunts
are humanly impossible and are obviously computer-generated. The
villain’s secret weapon, which is prominently featured in the film as
well as the trailers, is embarrassingly cheap looking and actually
laughable.
Even the venerable James Bond series has produced the occasional
clunker along with some real gems. The end of “XXX” makes it fairly
obvious this is the first of a series. Hopefully, the producers will
cut a couple of special effects next time and spend some of the
budget on a serviceable script.
* VAN NOVACK, 48, is the director of institutional research at
Cal State Long Beach.
‘Spy Kids’ succeeds with less heart
When the first “Spy Kids” came out last year, I finally dragged
myself to see it on the strength of several trusted recommendations.
I was delighted to discover it was a spirited adventure film that
genuinely captured the boundless imagination of children.
Director Robert Rodriguez was clearly still on daily speaking
terms with his inner child (which was a pleasant surprise coming from
the man who created the ultra-violent “Desperado,” also starring
Banderas). Plus, “Spy Kids” had a beating heart at it’s core, which
made for some touching moments that caught the viewer off guard.
Enter “Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams,” a fairly
melodramatic title for a film that doesn’t take itself too seriously.
This time out, Rodriguez assaults the viewer with more kids, more
action, more gadgets and less heart.
Spy siblings Carmen (Alexa Vega) and Juni (Daryl Sabara) find
themselves competing with another brother/sister duo for the choice
assignment within their agency -- and the new kids on the block don’t
play fair. I could go into more story details, but they’re really too
numerous to list.
“Spy Kids 2” is a roller coaster of a movie that whips around at
breakneck speed. The problem is, it never gives you time to breath.
This second installment definitely lives up to the standard of its
predecessor: it’s fun. However, “Spy Kids 2” is loaded with so many
characters, action sequences and story lines that it often becomes
dizzying. I think you have to be under 12 to think this fast. Bearing
that in mind, there is little doubt it will please its core audience,
but one of the charms of the first film was how it offered
sophisticated adult humor to keep parental minds occupied.
There are a lot of big names here who turn in great performances:
Steve Buscemi, Ricardo Montalban and Bill Paxton, but each of them
suffers from not having enough screen time to work the full
potentials of their gifts. Blink and you miss them. Even Antonio
Banderas and Carla Gugino are reduced to extended cameos despite the
fact their names are above the title. The kids are definitely the
stars, but I wish the parents were more present. I felt like a
latch-key viewer.
“Spy Kids 2” lacks a heart at the center of its story. Whereas
last time Carmen and Juni
were learning about their parent’s secret life while
rescuing them, this narrative is more perfunctory, an excuse to
get them from A to B. Near the end, Rodriguez tries to inject some
meaning into the proceedings, but if feels forced and unearned.
Vega and Sabara deserve special kudos for being such a pleasure to
watch. Their energy keeps things interesting in a movie that too
often forgets to keep it simple, and ultimately, tries too hard.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 29, is currently working toward his master’s
degree in screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los
Angeles.
‘Blood Work’ just doesn’t work
In many ways it is refreshing in today’s cinematic world of
special effects and animated reality to see a film made the old
fashioned way.
Clint Eastwood directs, produces and stars in “Blood Work,” a tale
of a serial killer’s obsession with playing cat and mouse. Eastwood
plays a retired FBI profiler, Terry McCaleb, who needs a heart
transplant and receives a donor heart from a woman who was murdered
in a convenience store. He finds out about the homicide because the
victim’s sister, played by the always capable Wanda De Jesus, seeks
out McCaleb two months after his operation and wants him to find her
sister’s killer.
Unfortunately, the film fails as a whodunit since the real killer
will probably be apparent to you early on. It also fails as a
character study, since the screenwriter, Brian Helgeland, utilizes
cliche plot devices and poor dialogue. Helgeland really could have
done a much better job of adapting the book by Michael Connelly.
Lastly, the film also fails as an action/romance.
McCaleb agrees to search for the killer and attempts to show his
age by displaying vulnerability at various times, but Eastwood’s
vanity wins out as not one, but three women (Anjelica Huston as
McCaleb’s Cardiologist; Tina Lifford as McCaleb’s police
collaborator, Detective Jaye Winston; Wanda De Jesus) show an
interest in McCaleb as more than just a father figure.
In fact the sight of 72 year-old Eastwood in a forced romantic
scene with De Jesus’s character seems almost incestuous, as she
lustfully kisses his scarred chest, within which her sister’s heart
beats.
The action sequences consist of McCaleb shooting guns and missing
and Eastwood’s stunt double running twice as fast and strong as
Eastwood. The story becomes convoluted toward the end when obvious
opportunities to capture and incapacitate the killer are not seized.
Although Paul Rodriguez is intended to be annoying as a
competitive cop, he is more annoying due to his Hispanic caricature
and blustery delivery. Jeff Daniels is amusing, and later shows depth
as McCaleb’s “dumb and dumber” partner. As the credits rolled, and my
wife sitting next to me panned the film, I began to wonder why I
liked it. While it was not suspenseful and the pacing was
improvisational at times, I still came away from the film satisfied
that McCaleb got the bad guy, and everyone lived happily ever after.
Mainly, I think it was a nostalgic feeling that here is the guy
responsible for “Dirty Harry” still doing it at 72. I guess it’s a
“guy thing.”
* RAY BUFFER, 32, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
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