The
Rundown (2003)
Rated R
Starring: The Rock, Seann William Scott,
and Rosario Dawson
Rating:

out
of

|
The modern action film genre has gotten increasingly tired as of late.
So I was surprised to find that The Rundown is a rare treat: an action
movie that actually retained my interest until the end credits. Beck (The Rock) is a "retrival expert" who works for Billy
Walker (William Lucking). Beck doesn't want to be a bounty hunter forever,
so he's sent on "one last job" which will secure him enough
money to retire from the job and open a restaurant. (Aren't action heroes
always wanting to do something else?) However, he's sent to the Amazon
to retrieve Walker's son, Travis (Seann William Scott), who's hiding out
in a Brazilian mining town.
Once he's in Brazil, Beck discovers
that Travis is on the trail of "El
Diablo Gato", a piece of ancient treasure thought to be worth millions.
The mining town is run by Hatcher (Christopher Walken), who employs the
townspeople as indentured slaves. Hatcher believes that, if the treasure
is real, it's from his property and therefore belongs to him. The trick
is finding it and he needs Travis around to do that. So, Hatcher steps
in to prevent Beck from leaving with Travis before he finds the treasure.
Travis, on the other hand, doesn't want to leave before he finds the treasure
either. Further confusing things is a band of rebels fighting Hatcher
for their freedom, who'd love to have the treasure's millions to ensure
their freedom from the crookedness of people like Hatcher.
Director Peter Berg (Friday
Night Lights) uses slow-motion, unique camera
angles, and a bit (thankfully, just a bit) of digital enhancement to make
the action in The Rundown jump off the screen. The fighting, especially
in a scene with Beck taking on the rebel's best fighters, is top-notch
-- rivaling some of the best wire-fu scenes in Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon. The Rock has a very dynamic screen presence and fairly good comedic
timing. If this film and The Scorpion King are any indication, he's now
a bankable action star.
Christopher Walken, who has admitted he's been in movies that he himself
hasn't even seen, is about the only real liablity here. He looks extremely
tired (and oddly misshapen at times) and delivers a performance equal
to that of someone on Thorazine. There's a scene where he tries to explain
his anger at losing Travis to Beck by explaining the concept of the Tooth
Fairy to his soldiers. It's a glaring misstep in a movie that, overall,
is otherwise tightly written.
The
Rundown is a lighthearted action comedy that doesn't ask you to make
gigantic suspensions of disbelief to reach its climax. It doesn't keep
you in the dark to make something unexpected seem exciting. It just delivers
entertainment with a lot of explosions, fight scenes, and a few chuckles.
That's all it should do and it succeeds where plenty of other similar
movies have failed miserably.
Trivia: The
film's original title was "Helldorado". It was then changed
to "Welcome to the Jungle" before being changed again to The
Rundown. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |