R.I.P.D. (FILM REVIEW)
R.I.P.D.
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Slain Cop Rises from the Dead in Revenge Action Comedy
Veteran detective Nick Walker (Ryan
Reynolds) is very content between his 15-year career with the Boston Police
Department and being happily-married to the love of his life, Julia (Stefanie
Szostak). However, his American Dream is irreversibly ruined the fateful day he
is assigned to bring down a drug cartel conducting business out of an abandoned
factory along the waterfront.
For, greed gets the best of his
partner, Bobby Hayes (Kevin Bacon), after the ensuing shootout, when they
discover a stash of gold artifacts. And instead of taking the antique ingots
back to headquarters, he decides to shoot Nick dead and blame the murder on the
bad guys. To add insult to injury, Bobby consoles Julia and even has the
temerity to put the moves on the grieving widow.
Meanwhile, Nick finds himself
neither in Heaven nor Hell, but in a police purgatory where a proctor
(Mary-Louise Parker) offers him a chance to return to Earth as a member of a
squad of zombie cops called the Rest in Peace Department (R.I.P.D.). He leaps
at the opportunity, and is immediately paired with a
late, Old West lawman, a
salty cowboy named Roycephus Pulsipher (Jeff Bridges).
The
grizzled gunslinger grudgingly agrees to work with a partner for the first
time, and in the blink of an eye the two are teleported back to Beantown to
round up renegade dead souls who have somehow evaded the afterlife. There, Nick
conveniently also has an opportunity to check in on Julia and plot his revenge
on Bobby.
Like a poor
man’s version of Men in Black, R.I.P.D. is a disappointing
action comedy both in terms of action and comedy. Think “ghost” instead of
“alien” adversaries and you have the basic idea of what director Robert
Schwentke is going for.
Unfortunately,
the obsolete special f/x leave a lot to be desired, and the corny jokes fall
flat. Another major structural flaw is the lack of chemistry between the
protagonists, a no-no in any unlikely-buddies adventure. Ryan Reynolds looks
lost opposite the drawling, generally unintelligible Jeff Bridges who behaves
like he’s still on the set of True Grit.
R.I.P.D.
is D.O.A.!
Fair (1 star)
Rated PG-13 for violence, profanity, sensuality and sexual
references
Running Time: 96 minutes
Distributor:
Universal Pictures
1 comment:
Yeah, almost RIPD my hair out.
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