DVD Review: ‘The Bank Job’

Ram Man:

If you weren’t able to catch the Bank Job at the cinema earlier this year, your in luck, it hits the video shelves on Tuesday! Roger Donaldson has assembled a fine cast featuring Jason Statham (Transporter), Saffron Burrows (Troy) and James Faulkner (Hitman) to tell the tale of one of the greatest robberies of all time.

It’s 1971 in London. The music, the clothing and the times are changing. A drug lord who claims to be related to Malcolm X calls himself Micheal X (Peter De Jersey) is running rampant in London. He holds incriminating photos of some of England’s royal family that makes him untouchable. So MI6 (yes they are a real organization..but Tom Cruise isn’t a member) hires some local thieves to rob the bank and retrieve the photos in order to arrest Micheal X. Terry Leather (Statham) and Martina Love lead a rag tag team of criminals who not only retrieve the photos but also land about 4 million dollars in cash and jewels. Now the team has the police and virtually every criminal in London after them.

The Bank Job is a very entertaining film based on actual events that happened in the early 70’s in London. There are twists and lots of intrigue. The DVD special features include a “making of” documentary and an actual account of the real robbery that the film is based on. There are deleted and extended scenes that include a love scene between Statham and Burrows that hit the cutting room floor! Rent the Bank Job, its a steal for a night of great entertainment!

Check out WAMG original review here!

[rating: 3.5/5]

Jason Statham’s ‘Death Race’ Trailer

Official plot synopsis: “Jason Statham leads the cast of an action-thriller set in the post-industrial wasteland of tomorrow, with the world’s most brutal sporting event as its backdrop. A penitentiary full of felons has inspired the jailers to create a grisly pastime ripe for lucrative kickbacks. Now, adrenalized inmates, a global audience hungry for televised violence and a spectacular arena come together to form the ‘Death Race.’

Three-time speedway champion Jensen Ames (Statham) is an expert at survival in the harsh landscape that has become our country. Just as he thinks he has turned his life around, the ex-con is framed for a gruesome murder he didn’t commit. Forced to don the mask of the mythical driver Frankenstein — a crowd favorite who seems impossible to kill — Ames is given an easy choice by Terminal Island’s warden (Joan Allen): suit up or rot away in a cell.

His face hidden by a metallic mask, one convict will be put through an insane three-day challenge. Ames must survive a gauntlet of the most vicious criminals in the country’s toughest prison to claim the prize of freedom. Driving a monster car outfitted with machine guns, flamethrowers and grenade launchers, one desperate man will destroy anything in his path to win the most twisted spectator sport on Earth.”


It is set to hit theaters on August 22nd.

‘Death Race’ now part of the summer releases

Universal has bumped up the release date for the remake of ‘Death Race’ starring Jason Statham and Tyrese Gibson, to August 22nd 2008 which will put it into the mix with the summer blockbuster releases. It was previously slated for a September 26th release date.

‘Crank 2’ will Haim to please …

According to TheMovieBlog.com, Corey Haim has been cast in Crank 2. Is this the beginning of Haim’s comeback rise to glory? I haven’t found any details regarding what his role will be, but who cares? This news is both cool and funny at the same time. What do you think? Should he be a good guy, a bad guy … or, one of many likely dead bodies?

‘Crank 2’ … a silly idea, but so much fun!

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I must admit … as silly and off-the-wall as the first Crank movie was, I actually enjoyed watching the pure adrenaline charged, no excuses, in your face extreme and often absurd stylized action. Not to mention, Jason Statham is always enjoyable. So, in my moment of naive denial, I figured it was a one-shot carnival ride intended for mere thrills … apparently, it somehow made someone think a sequel was in order. I know the character supposedly has a iron-clad heart that seems to be indestructible, but how one justifies bringing back a character who met his fate quite as clearly as Chev Chelios did in the first is beyond my feeble mind’s comprehension. However, I will indulge that lesser side of my brain and suspend my disbelief to near critical meltdown.

The sequel, titled Crank 2: High Voltage, is being bank-rolled by Lakeside Entertainment. The story marks the return of Jason Statham as Chev Chelios, who in this raging romp finds himself squaring off against a mob boss who has stolen his uniquely resilient heart and replaced it with a battery-powered substitute that requires periodic jolts of high-voltage to maintain functionality. Amy Smart has been re-cast as Chelios’ girlfriend and his new nemesis will be played by Clifton Collins, Jr. (Tigerland, Capote). Also cast are Bai Ling, Dwight Yoakam and Efren Ramirez.

Review: ‘Revolver’ on DVD

Jason Statham in ‘Revolver’

Tagline: The greatest trick that he ever pulled was making you believe that he is you.

What? It takes you a while to figure out exactly what the heck this movie is all about, but once you do its simply freakin’ brilliant. I’ve loved the films of Guy Ritchie [except for Swept Away, of course] ever since the first time I saw Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Ritchie has his own unique way of structuring his films and they’re always so energetic and exhilarating. Ritchie is a writer-director that combines all the best aspects of fresh film-making into movie’s that work and aren’t pretentious, but are still edgy and entertaining.

Revolver (2005/2007 USA) is no exception, but Ritchie has raised the bar with this film. The average movie-goer wouldn’t peg Ritchie for being the cerebral type of film-maker, but then again … what does the average movie-goer know? After all, if cerebral films were popular in the mainstream, it wouldn’t have taken Ritchie two years to raise money to make this film and two more years to get a limited release in the USA after premiering in 2005. Revolver is a thinking person’s movie, but it also still holds true to Ritchie’s trademark style.

In a nutshell, Revolver is about Jake Green, played by Jason Statham, a man who has just been released from a seven year term in prison. Green is dead set on making the man who put him there pay his dues. That man is Dorothy Macha, played by Ray Liotta, a man who has done very well for himself while Green was away. Two years after Green’s release, he has developed a hearty success and makes his move on Macha. Just when Green thinks things are looking up, he finds himself thrown into the oddest of predicaments. Green learns of some things, meets some strange characters and begins experiencing some extremely bizarre experiences. Sorry … my vagueness at this point is crucial to not spoiling the movie for you. Sort of like trying to tell you about Pulp Fiction without giving anything away.

To put it simply, Revolver is about Green’s struggle to overcome the fallacy of his perceived enemy and to vanquish his true enemy … the enemy within. Don’t look at me like that … see the movie. Statham is great, despite the fact that his normal action-packed performance is all but non-existent. The true acting gem of this film is Ray Liotta who plays a boss that is gradually losing his empire, his control and his mental marbles. It does take some patience getting to the guts of the story, but its worth sticking out. Besides, Revolver is anything but boring while on the journey to enlightenment that Ritchie so generously sends us on. As always in Guy Ritchie films, this movie contains plenty of funky shots and sequences, time shuffled in editing, well-balanced humor and seriousness, great music and great characters to boot. Just remember you’re getting a bonus this time … its like watching Guy Ritchie direct an ancient Greek allegory.

[rating:4/5]

DVD Features:

  • Commentary with Writer/Director Guy Ritchie and Editor James Herbert
  • Deleted/Extended Scenes
  • Outtakes
  • The Game: The Making of Revolver
  • Revolver: Making the Music
  • The Concept: An Interview with Writer/Director Guy Ritchie and Editor James Herbert
  • Photo Gallery
  • Music Trailer
  • Previews

Review: ‘Chaos’

Jason Statham and Ryan Phillippe in ‘Chaos’

I was buying groceries the other day and out in front of the store is one of the many new Red Box DVD vending machines we see everywhere. I have a habit of stopping on my way out to see what’s there. I had never actually used the service before, but on this occasion I noticed a new movie that kind of snuck up on me. It was an action movie that appeared to be direct-to-video, but it starred Jason Statham, Ryan Phillippe and Wesley Snipes. I though, “Hmm… it may be watchable. Besides, maybe Snipes is finally trying to revive his career after his time spent fighting the IRS.” So, I rented the DVD and this is how it went.

I’ll let IMDB.com give you the DVD case synopsis … [In Seattle, detective Quentin Conners is unfairly suspended and his partner Jason York leaves the police force after a tragic shooting on Pearl Street Bridge, when the hostage and the criminal die. When a bank is heist with hostage situation, Conners is assigned in charge of the operation having the rookie Shane Dekker as partner. The thieves, leaded by Lorenz, apparently do no steal a penny from the bank. While chasing the gangsters, the police team discloses that they planted a virus in the system, stealing one billion dollars from the most different accounts, using the principle of the Chaos Theory. Further, they find that Lorenz is killing his accomplices. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil]

Chaos (2005) meets the quality equivalent of an average television cop drama, at best. Oh yeah, it was made in 2005. So, why is it just recently popping up on DVD in the States? It could be due to a couple different reasons. First, upon watching the film, I couldn’t help but notice some plot elements that seemed to be borrowed from both Inside Man and War. The I caught myself and realized this film precedes both of those, respectively released in 2006 and 2007. I will, however, state that Inside Man is a far superior movie and, while I wasn’t the biggest fan of War, it too was better than Chaos. This left me with one remaining theory, the movie was not seen as a sure-fire profit-maker for the distributors. I can only assume that the recent popularity boost for Statham finally encouraged them to release this sub-par action film that the director, Tony Giglio (Soccer Dog) repeatedly refers to as more of a mystery than and action movie in the Making of featurette. Another element of this DVD extra that bugged me was how he kept suggesting that this was the type of script that Statham and Phillippe hadn’t done before. Well, Giglio actually mentions Phillippe’s work on Way of the Gun, so I find this contradictory. As for Statham, these are primarily the only type of movies he makes. [Again, I refer to War, despite its later release, but we can also consider Crank and Transporter.]

Please note that I’m not bashing Statham, or any of the other cast, but rather reflecting on the smooth-flowing but otherwise boring and unoriginal screenplay. The twists are hyped to be a big mystery, but a viewer cannot help but connect the major plot similarities of Chaos to War, simply because we’ve seen War already. OK, sure … its not the directors fault that the two movies’ release dates got twisted out of order, but it hurts the film’s element of surprise. The acting was fine, as good as is to be expected, the directing and cinematography meet at about the same junction, but as a whole the movie just falls kind of flat. The action really isn’t that exciting and even the chase scene between Phillippe on a Harley pursuing a perp in a truck is only mildly exciting. All things being equal, Chaos is worth the one dollar I digitally dropped at the Red Box, but anything more would have been just shy of upsetting.

[rating:2.5/5]