| The
Chronicles of Riddick Movie Review
Computer graphics may well be
destroying movies. True they've allowed filmmakers
the ability to create creatures and lands that could
only be dreamed of before, such as with The Lord of
the Rings trilogy. And that's not to say that The Chronicles
of Riddick would be any better if it had to rely on
miniatures, puppets, animatronics, and matte paintings.
No, it could possibly still be the overblown, foolish,
monotonous flick that it is. But I don't think so.
Writer/director David
Twohy has made three above-average B-movies: Pitch Black,
Below, and The Arrival. That's quite a feat these days
because B-movies are now multi-million dollar spectacles,
such as Independence Day, so making good, scrappy genre
pictures with low(er) budgets is a labor of love. In
these films, when Twohy's films rely on their characters
and the situations he's plopped them into, they're pretty
great. When they rely on effects, however, such as the
CGI night creatures in Pitch or the double-jointed aliens
in Arrival, they kind of fall apart. Twohy sure loves
these effects, but he doesn't need them.
Now that he has at his
disposal an armada of effect technicians he's gone wild.
Like a sophomore on Spring Break in Florida he's flashing
his effects all over the place, and the result is about
as interesting. "Pleeeasse, put your effects back
in," you want to say, half-shielding your eyes.
"You're embarrassing everyone at the table."
It's really too bad
because there are several glimmers of what Riddick could
have been, what I really hoped it would be. In the opening
Riddick is on a desolate ice planet and being chased
down by some unscrupulous bounty hunters, led by a guy
named Toombs (Nick Chinlund). Riddick turns the tables
on Toombs, discovers who put the bounty on his head,
and heads off in Toomb's spacecraft to get the reward
taken off. This event comes back later to bedevil Riddick
and it appears that Twohy is going to make a Sci-Fi
version of The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. No such
luck.
No, now that Twohy has
this incredible effects palette at his beck-and-call
he can create the massive armies of the Necromonger,
a warrior race that descends upon planets, decimates
them and assimilates the population. They have a gazillion
ships and are led by the Lord Marshal (Colm Feore).
The Lord Marshal has been to the Underverse, a legendary
place where…well, we're not entirely sure what
the heck it is (bet we'll find out in the next installment
though) but just visiting there has enabled the Lord
Marshal to act like the Flash, speeding along faster
than anyone else, with the ability to tear men's souls
from their bodies. The Necromonger's latest conquest
is Helion, a race of Banana Republic-wearing people
who get taken over in one night. Just below the Lord
Marshal in rank is Vaako (Karl Urban) a scheming usurper
who is goaded on by his ambitious wife, Dame Vaako (Thandie
Newton).
The Lord Marshal is
scared though. He was told, as a young warrior that
he would one day die at the hands of a Furian, a race
of uber-warriors. Guess who turns out to be the last
Furian? It's a bit better than finding out that Riddick
had a really high midichlorian count, but not a lot.
The Lord Marshal is
told all of this, by the way, by an Elemental, a race
of beings that can appear or disappear at will, as if
on the breeze. The Elemental is played by Dame Judy
Dench and it's a magic mirror role, a lazy construct
that helps get a lot of the exposition out of the way.
The scope is so huge
that the film can never pull itself back. There's too
much territory to cover when expanded to such a global
scale. Riddick saves the universe? Isn't that kind of
the opposite of what made Pitch Black such a surprise?
Chunking it onto the same galactic stage puts it in
the league with other bombastic projects such as Dune
and only slightly more successful.
When it seems that we'll
never get off the depressing planet of Helion Riddick
finds himself caught once again by Toombs (marginally
fun) and heading to the maximum security prison on Crematoria,
a planet whose sun regularly char-broils the surface
at 700 degrees when it rises. It rises at unpredictable
intervals as well, in this film usually when the script
requires it.
Down in the bowels of
the prison Riddick meets up again with the girl he saved
from the first film. But she's grown up and become as
fierce as Riddick, taking the name Kyra (Alexa Davalos).
It's also down in the prison where they release some
CGI guard dogs, that look like they have serrated armor
for hair.
The dogs, like the crashing
ships, or the encroaching exploding heat blasts, are
just plain boring. We know it's CGI. No one is going
to get hurt (well, except the predetermined extras)
and we have to watch people pant and run as if it might.
It's tedious and a bit of insult.
Perhaps if Twohy hadn't
had all the CGI ships, dogs, spirit people and Johnny
Quick power moves at his disposal he'd have been forced
to be as creative and ingenious as he has been in the
past. What we'd have on our hands then would be another
Road Warrior instead of a rewarmed The Postman. But
he did, and thus he wasn't, and Chronicles of Riddick
is the poorer for it.
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