Ghost Rider
By Al KratinaMar 5, 2007 - 14:25:10 PM
Ghost Rider
2006, USA
Starring: Nicholas Cage, Eva Mendez, Peter Fonda, Donal Logue
Directed by: Mark Steven Johnson
Written by: Mark Steven Johnson
Produced by: Avi Arad, Michael De Luca, Gary Foster, Steven Paul
Genres: Action, Fantasy, Comic Book Adaptation
Release Date: February 16, 2007
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for horror violence and disturbing images.
Distrubutors: Columbia Pictures
Running Time: 114 minutes of pure hell.
Speechless. I'm absolutely speechless. I've been struck dumb by this film, and not just in the sense that I’m mute. I feel like I've been hit in the head with a sledgehammer of stupidity, numbing my tongue and knocking out the ability to thinking clearly and conjugated verbs properly. This movie is unequivocally, unarguably awful.
Ghost Rider, the comic, is not particularly good either, as evidenced by the fact that Marvel has been unable to keep a successful regular series up and running, so I suppose the utter incompetence with which the film is made makes it an accurate adaptation, though a complete and utter failure as a movie.
After that, a bunch of other crap happens in a very linear, obvious fashion. I'd relay it to you, but the bland, sterile text of my description would probably be so close to the actual painfully predictable and boring script that I might get sued for plagiarism. Cage is a talented actor, but he's skipped the phase of his career
where he makes good films with strong, subtle performances and gone straight to Pacino's cocaine years. Peter Fonda inherited nothing from his father, it would seem, other than a hawkish, Roman nose, and Eva Mendez, shockingly, displays the most subtlety in a cast full of inflamed, boorish performances. The worst display, however, comes not from notorious over-actor Cage, but rather from
American Beauty’s Wes Bentley. As the demon Blackheart, his particular brand of evil involves a lot of cackling, widening his eyes threateningly, and much of the same sort of ill-defined malevolence that motivated Iago in Othello or, more apt considering the maturity level of this film, COBRA in
G.I. Joe. Cage and writer/director Johnson are clearly so giddy at the concept of a Ghost Rider movie they're like ravers on a lungful of nitrous: dizzy, retarded, and nauseous. Which, with the addition of muteness, is exactly how I felt leaving the theatre.
RATING: 1 on 10
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