Genre: Action/Adventure
Director: Corey Yuen
Starring: starring Devon Aoki, Derek Boyer,
Sarah Carter, Collin Chou, Steve Howey, Kane kosugi
RunTime: -
Released By: Shaw
Rating: TBA
Opening Day: 26 October 2006
Synopsis:
The movie adaptation of the best selling video game series
Dead or Alive.
Movie Review:
The Xbox generation has apparently been conclusively unmasked
as rabid fanboys of scantily clad, butt-kicking CGI babes
with gravity defying mammary glands. First Tomb Raider captured
the imaginations of young men unseen since the likes of Farrah
Fawcett’s swimsuit poster and the ensuing (cat)calls
for a live-action movie was finally heeded. But unfortunately,
the result was less than flattering and never really lived
up to the fantasy instilled in many a man’s mind. That
could possibly be attributed to the handing over of the reins
to people that had no idea, or any business trying to execute
the sort of reverie that most of its fans wanted from Miss
Croft and her famed ass-ets.
Now
the treatment of “DOA: Dead or Alive” is simple.
Cute girls. Big breasts. Bouncing. Kung-fu tournament. The
elements are also straightforward and are seemingly being
well taken care of with self-acknowledged pop culture transposer,
Paul W.S. Anderson of the Resident Evil movies as producer
and Corey Yuen, topdog action choreographer as its principle
director. You really know where the film’s loyalties
lie within its racy jokes and risqué wardrobes.
The
suitably no-fuss plot brings together voluptuous women (Jaime
Pressley, Devon Aoki, Holly Valance, Sarah Carter) from different
parts of the world, each with their own individual technical
skill set in order to compete in a tournament held on a picturesque
island controlled by the shadowy Dr Donovan (Eric Roberts)
who has a nonsensical scheme worthy of Dick Dastardly’s
seal of approval.
As
a strong suit, this adaptation translates flawlessly onto
the screen, which is also perhaps its weakest point by some
regards. The actresses, beautiful as they are, do not share
the charisma they so obviously have and makes them no more
interesting than their digitally rendered counterparts. There’s
no pretense of campy fun as everyone takes themselves seriously,
ironically bringing upon itself some cheeseball fun in the
process. Along with strong shades of Kill Bill-esque scenarios
and Mortal Kombat’s island tournament one-on-one battles
(which Anderson directed), it also has a strong penchant for
behind-closed-doors sort of suggestive teasing to keep the
barn door raised just high enough for adolescents to crawl
through with joysticks in hand.
The
action sequences are stupendously shot with its mise en scène
using bits and pieces from the preceding games and plays a
part in the action, making it much more than just the scenery
its performers routinely chew on. Often resembling the Sports
Illustrated swimsuit edition’s photo-shoot gone catty,
the pennant of victory is usually awarded to the fighter without
much blood or gore. It’s more concerned with the fluidity
of its fighters, the torrent of body blows and the improbable
athleticism of its female marionettes as wires carry them
across rooms without factoring the weight of their costume’s
padding. That’s the angle the film has taken much like
the games where the bouncy bits were ceaseless novelties that
gradually started to become the franchise’s main focus.
The males in this are understandably without any interesting
insights as well, coming across as brutish, misogynistic letches
that get their jaws inevitably handed to them in the apogee.
Much
like the antipodal suggestion of its title, the trumpeted
audacity of its concept will find itself being used repeatedly
when its final box office results finally turn up at the end
of its theatrical run. And whether the juvenile sexuality
and blatantly glorified action theatrics polarises its fair
share of advocates and its significant numbers of bellicose
critics also seems unavoidable. But you can call me fanboy,
for I’m entirely ready to buy into its gleefully unapologetic
jiggle extravaganza.
Movie
Rating:
(Entertainingly ridiculous and wildly off-hinged politically
correctness is refreshing)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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