Genre: Action
Director: Paul W.S. Anderson
Cast: Jason Statham, Joan Allen, Tyrese Gibson,
Ian McShane, Natalie Martinez, Jason Clarke, Frederick Koehler,
Jacob Vargas, Max Ryan, Robin Shou
RunTime: 1 hr 45 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: NC-16 (Some Violence and Coarse Language)
Official Website: http://www.deathracemovie.net/
Opening Day: 21 August 2008
Synopsis:
Jason Statham leads the cast of an action-thriller set in
the post-industrial wasteland of tomorrow, with the world's
most brutal sporting event as its backdrop. A penitentiary
full of felons has inspired the jailers to create a grisly
pastime ripe for lucrative kickbacks. Now, adrenalized inmates,
a global audience hungry for televised violence and a spectacular
arena come together to form the "Death Race."
Three-time
speedway champion Jensen Ames (Statham) is an expert at survival
in the harsh landscape that has become our country. Just as
he thinks he has turned his life around, the ex-con is framed
for a gruesome murder he didn't commit. Forced to don the
mask of the mythical driver Frankenstein -- a crowd favorite
who seems impossible to kill -- Ames is given an easy choice
by Terminal Island's warden (Joan Allen): suit up or rot away
in a cell.
His
face hidden by a metallic mask, one convict will be put through
an insane three-day challenge. Ames must survive a gauntlet
of the most vicious criminals in the country's toughest prison
to claim the prize of freedom. Driving a monster car outfitted
with machine guns, flamethrowers and grenade launchers, one
desperate man will destroy anything in his path to win the
most twisted spectator sport on Earth.
Movie Review:
We all know Jason Statham can act behind the wheel of an automobile.
After all, he's the quintessential Transporter who has done
The Italian Job, and flexes enough
muscles to waltz into any role requiring a hunky beefcake.
He lets his fists do the talking when declaring War, and looks ever so stern when emoting
that you need to
Crank the AC to cool him off, and has enough cunning left
over from The Bank Job to
hatch yet another plan to get out of the rut he's currently
thrown into for a Death
Race.
The
original movie was produced by B-grade king Roger Corman,
and had David Carradine and Sylvester Stallone in starring
roles as Frankenstein and Machine Gun Joe respectively. But
this remake is a totally different film altogether, only porting
over the names of some of the lead characters, and the concept
of souped up cars zhnged with weapons of highway
destruction, ranging from machine guns firing infinite bullets,
to oil slicks, smoke screen and napalm for added oomph in
blowing opponents sky high.
Instead
of a race cross-country in year 2000 USA, Paul W.S. Anderson's
version
updates it to year 2012 set in a stand alone penitentiary,
run by private
corporations whose objective is to make money from organizing
gladiatorial matches
amongst promising speed demon inmates. Naturally, Statham's
Jensen Ames, an ex race
car driver with pedigree credentials, gets framed for a murder
he didn't commit,
just to get him into the Terminal, donning the famous iron-mask
of Frankenstein, the
legendary race car driver who has one final race to go before
being granted his
freedom.
Organized
by the alpha-female type prison warden Hennesssey played by
Joan Allen,
who obtained her street cred for such characters from the
Bourne franchise (but
frankly, what is she doing here?), her sole aim is to allow
the myth of Frankenstein
to live, while milking money from internet streaming broadcasts.
If this sounds
familiar, then yes, Anderson had probably drawn inspiration
from movies such as The
Running Man, to something more recent in The Condemned. Does
Statham do a good job
in the lead action hero role as compared to his earlier peers?
Well, the fan in me
would say yes, because there is a serious dearth of action
heroes in Hollywood right
now.
But
the rival drivers are laughable cameos at best. Only worth
mentioning are Tyrese
Gibson, who had likely landed himself here from experience
out of 2 Fast 2 Furious
looking mean and dangerous, and I guess Mortal Kombat fans
would probably chuckle at
Robin Shou's brief appearance since he's no longer flavour
of the moment, whose
lines only consists of swearing in Cantonese. The rest just
contribute to the body
count, in set action sequences similar to that in Speed Racer,
only without the
psychedelic colours decorating the background, and going unabashedly
loud.
I
might seem to have been just name dropping a lot from movies
in the past, but
that's basically how Death Race felt, like a mishmash of generic
characters thrown
into generic action. Perhaps the targeted demographics for
the film will rejoice at
having another Mikaela Banes type character here, where Natalie
Martinez with her
sultry looks akin to Megan Fox provide just enough eye candy
and spunk, especially
when her Case cuts a lean figure on the race track, with inside
knowledge of short
cuts and navigational/co-gunner skills to boot. After all,
every mean looking car
requires a flower vase to complement it, right?
Cars,
babes and plenty of huge guns. Now isn't that formula for
a high-octane killer
death match race car movie set to a pulsating hip-hop soundtrack?
Unless of course
it also contains unintentionally comedic and nonsensical lines
of dialogue, and
loopholes to drive a huge truck through (erm, yes, there really
was a huge truck).
Movie Rating:
Review by Stefan Shih
(Leave your brains at the door if you intend to enjoy the
guilty pleasures of a cliche ride)
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