Friday, August 13, 2010

THE EXPENDABLES


The Expendables gives you more or less what you would expect from it, nothing more. But with that lineup roster that may be enough for action movie die hards. The hulking dialogue is as meathead processed as any script since “Con Air,” and when we get to those comparisons, we know we should be talking guilty pleasure here. Big laughs and lots of firepower – it delivers with a bang. Who cares about logistical holes?

Sylvester Stallone has contrived a scene where both Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger can share a cameo, the three of them bop around the worst dialogue known to steroid man. Yet the scene is riveting how each actor takes one consecutive worst line after the next and twists it into a delivery of manly badass cool (Bruce, I think, wins this contest). Later, Mickey Rourke, as a tattoo artist and biker, takes his boilerplate dialogue and yet approaches something like Brando doing “Reservoir Dogs.” As Eric Roberts says later in the film, it sounds like “bad Shakespeare.”

Mostly Stallone’s outfit are mercenaries who travel the world, doing violent jobs for hire. Among them are Jason Statham, Jet Li, Terry Crews, Randy Couture and Dolph Lundgren who can’t be bothered with being solely good. There’s a new assassination job in Baja where the bad guys are involved somehow in drug trafficking, but if you’re looking for complex revelations in illegal trade, then pick another movie. The Expendables go head to head with Roberts, David Zayas and former Royal Rumble champion Steve Austin who is nearly the giant that Lundgren happens to be. Austin does a lot of the dirty work, but there are some no-name actors who are also as brute as a UFC contender.

The glaring oversight is that Stallone doesn’t put all these guys in the same room often enough. For awhile, it’s the Sly Stallone / Jason Statham show, and their repartee certainly has a mentor warrior / protégé warrior relationship. The peak action scene, midway, has Stallone flying a plane while Statham climbs onto the nose of the plane to engage in close-sight machine gun annihilation of dozens of baddies lined up on the docks. Awesomely ridiculous heroics, that’s for sure. It’s not until the second trip to Baja does the rest of Stallone’s crew really get involved.

The second half of the movie is about saving the girl, who is played by Giselle Itie. She would be Stallone’s interest. Charisma Carpenter is Statham’s interest, a wavering relationship that needs a new rekindling. But the movie is lunkhead in the romance department. There is no final love scene as the girls are missing from it, as it all boils down to macho dudes hanging out and drinking too much – the merriment of testosterone.

“The Expendables” is a throwback to ’80’s style run and gun action, bone-crunching fistfights, and muscles-in-motion stunts. And it gets the big guys going blow to blow to each other, and Jet Li – why not – in a brawl going up against the biggest guy. The whiplash editing is a little rough, but it’s still easier to follow – and more fun – than “The A-Team” and “Knight and Day” and whatever other computerized chunky-junk action the rest of the summer has offered through now.

Go to the official site at http://expendablesthemovie.com/

Grade: B

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