Genre: Comedy
Director: Jay Chandrasekhar
Starring: Johnny Knoxville, Seann William Scott,
Jessica Simpson, Willie Nelson, Burt Reynolds
RunTime: 1 hr 46 mins
Released By: Golden Village
Rating: PG
Release
Date: 29 September 2005
Synopsis
:
Yeeeeeeeee
Haaaaaaawwww!
Fun-lovin’, fast-drivin’, good ol’ boy cousins
Bo (SEANN WILLIAM SCOTT) and Luke (JOHNNY KNOXVILLE) Duke
are back on the road and up to no good, along with their cousin
Daisy Duke (JESSICA SIMPSON), proud owner of the shortest
shorts in the South. Hazzard County boasts some of the most
axel-busting back roads, hair-raising moonshine, and best-looking
farm girls in all of Georgia – and the Duke boys enjoy
all three. Frequently.
The Duke family’s business is moonshine, and the boys’
Uncle Jesse (WILLIE NELSON) concocts the tastiest brew in
Dixie. More often than not, the boys find themselves on the
wrong side of the law as they race to make their deliveries,
leading the sheriff’s department on some truly wild
goose chases in their infamous orange Dodge Charger, the General
Lee.
After a long day on the job, there’s nothing like relaxing
with an ice cold beer at Hazzard County’s finest drinking
establishment, The Boar’s Nest, where Daisy waits tables.
From time to time, an out-of-towner makes the mistake of getting
a little too familiar with the most beautiful girl in Hazzard
County. They quickly find out (the hard way) that Daisy isn’t
just a pretty face – she kicks ass like a Duke, and
with Bo and Luke in the mix, that usually means a good old-fashioned
knock-down, drag-out bar brawl.
But it’s not all moonshine and farm girls these days
– when Bo and Luke discover evidence that their neighbors’
properties are being unlawfully seized by crooked commissioner
Boss Hogg (BURT REYNOLDS), their only chance to protect their
hometown is to put the pedal to the metal in a last-ditch
scheme to save Hazzard County.
Movie
Review:
Apparently,
2005 is the official year for remakes. “The Dukes of
Hazzard” joins the party, making yet another movie you
do not need to see. The movie opens with Bo (Seann William
Scott) and Luke Duke (Johnny Knoxville) delivering moonshine
for their Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson) in their tangerine 1969
Dodge Charger (nicknamed General Lee). In the next five minutes,
they will fight for their cousin Daisy’s (Jessica Simpson)
honour, perform too many car stunts with General Lee and rub
shoulders with the baddest man in the whole damn town, Boss
Jefferson Davis Hogg (Burt Reynolds), and his sidekick, Sheriff
Roscoe P. Coltrane (M.C. Gainey). The rest of the movie? Rinse,
lather, repeat.
Alright,
it wasn’t that bad. Credit must go to the two leads
for being sufficiently affable and indeed the rest of the
cast, most notably Willie Nelson, for giving up some laughs.
Seann William Scott and Johnny Knoxville make an adequate
if increasingly tepid pair, but they ultimately lack the charm
to make a hoot out of the pedestrian script. Perhaps they
should pick up some tips from Willie Nelson, so endearing
in his delivery that his impossibly cheesy lines become easily
the most amusing parts of the entire show. And he appears
in fewer scenes than I can count on both hands.
The much-talked-about
Jessica Simpson as Daisy Duke appears minimally in the movie,
to the dismay and/or delight of moviegoers everywhere, but
when she does, let’s just say she isn’t exactly
equipped in the clothing department (again, to the dismay
and/or delight…). As for her acting debut, it’s
really not so much “acting” than “flaunting
her body”, so be prepared to see Simpson in a whole
lot of other flimsy movie cameos.
Yet, silly
characters with cheeky lines can only go so far; it comes
to a point where the entire movie becomes all but an elaborate
car stunt, and not a very good one at that. There are scenes
after scenes of impossible turns, close shaves, cars flying
in the air and nifty tricks like that, but all of that barely
got any adrenaline pumping. I’m not one for mighty explosions
and loud blockbusters, but if the movie is going to label
itself an action film, I would expect more than this. It isn’t
shoddy work, I assure you; “The Dukes of Hazzard”
just lacks oomph (which could be argued as being worse than
merely being shoddy). Simple put, there’s nothing much
to see or get excited about in this movie, and as the soundtrack
blasts away, I’m reminded of an immortal line, “…full
of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
For
a production like this, there is nothing much to nitpick at
since everything is at best and worse, mediocre – I
think I laughed more during the bloopers/credits than I did
in the preceding 106 minutes. Compared to flat-out terrible
films, which become at the very least infamous for being appalling
bad, such movies are perhaps worse sinners in that they’re
insipid, pointless and immediately forgettable. In terms of
filmmaking, “The Dukes of Hazzard” is neither
lazy nor half-hearted, the problem is that there is just nothing
much to begin with in the first place. So why does Hollywood
continue picking such productions up? The answer, quite simply,
is that I do not know.
Movie
Rating:
(I
could say that the movie’s all brawn and no brains,
but then I’d still have to rethink the ‘brawn’
part. In a word – ‘meh’)
Review by Angeline
Chui
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