xXx: Return of Xander Cage
Film Review by Kam Williams
High-Octane
Franchise Revived by the Return of Vin Diesel as the Title Character
The high-octane thriller so overshadowed the relatively-mundane Die Another Day that year that Pierce Brosnan would soon be replaced by Daniel Craig as 007. Ironically, Vin Diesel was also replaced by Ice Cube in xXx 2, a drismal sequel that bombed at the box office, leaving a once-promising franchise on life support.
It's taken a decade and a half, but Vin is finally reprising the role he originated. The good news is that the picture arrives laced with the sort of death-defying feats that made the first xXx such a hit. That means a plethora of action sequences in which our superhuman protagonist proves impervious to bullets and the laws of gravity.
There are also tons of the trademark titillation, coming courtesy of both Vin's beefcake and a bevy of adoring beauties. Directed by D.J. Caruso (Disturbia), xXx: Return of Xander Cage even tips its hat to earlier episodes via cameos by Samuel L. Jackson and Ice Cube.
At the point of departure, we find Xander living under the radar in self-imposed exile in Latin America. He's still an extreme sports enthusiast, and just for fun skis across the treetops of a verdant rain forest before switching to a skateboard for an equally-breathtaking ride down a winding mountainside highway.
Next thing you know, he's being coaxed out of retirement by a CIA chief (Toni Collette) to keep the world safe for democracy. The mission involves retrieving a devastating weapon of mass destruction code-named "Pandora's Box" that's fallen into the hands of a gang of daredevils led by a diabolical trio (Donnie Yen, Tony Jaa and Deepika Padukone) bent on world domination.
After
jettisoning a standard-issue, U.S. military support team, Xander
recruits a motley crew of renegades more in his own image. Can that
rag-tag posse, composed of a crack sniper (Ruby Rose), a fearless
getaway driver (Rory McCann), a state-of-the-art gadget wizard (Nina
Dobrev) and an affable DJ/ jack-of-all-trades (Kris Wu), rise to the
occasion?
Why
not? Anything is possible, with cartoon physics on your side!
Rated PG-13 for sexuality, profanity and pervasive violence`
Running time: 107 minutes
Distributor: Paramount Pictures
To see a trailer for xXx: Return of Xander Cage, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQEFmHsseaU
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