xXx²: The Next Level

Mark:

Unashamedly, I admit I own xXx the first on DVD. I saw it several times in the cinema, and have watched it several times on DVD. I will argue with anyone who chooses to take me on, of its virtues as an almost unmatched popcorn-actioneer. Scene set… now for the review.

xXx: State of the UnionDisappointingly, xXx² is not nearly a match for its predecessor. With an extremely abrupt opening, during which we hear of Xander (Vin Diesel) Cage’s death the night before in Bora Bora, and see Agent Gibbons become a fugitive with technogeek sidekick Tobey Lee Shavers, xXx² has pretensions at being another great action film. After the frenetic first three or four minutes, during which we see much of the action seen in the trailer – alarming me at least, as I wondered if there would be anything left for the remaining 97 minutes! – this film slows right down. It tries to introduce character, failing dismally, and only at the end does it remember it started as an action film.

Which is not to say I am against character development in an action film. But the Darius Stone and his former lover – will they get back together? – subplot? Give me a break. It just doesn’t work, and it makes the time between the action sequences far too long.

The comic relief, in the form of Tobey Lee Shavers, the mad NSA inventor who gave Xander the great weapons in xXx, falls flat and hard. There is far too much of his nervous geek routine, it is never amusing, and the use of his character in the original was far more balanced. The leadership of Jackson also misses its mark, and gee, I wonder if he is really dead? Hmmm…

Remarkably, for a film that cost US$87million, the major set pieces are built of very poorly made CGI – the bullet train chase is the best example of how badly CGI can go wrong. Surely, Jackson and Dafoe can’t have cost that much, that there’d be no money left to make these sequences even approaching realistic?

There are explosions, fast cars, fast women, and intrigue as an attempted coup takes place during the State of the Union address. Much of it fails to capture the imagination. Sadly, the loss of Vin Diesel was just too large an obstacle for this film – his charisma was the only thing that stopped xXx being a really shitty action movie.

Rating: 1.5 stars
Review by Mark Lavercombe, 23rd May 2005
Hoopla Factor: 2.0 stars



Stuart:

Okay so I didn’t like the original xXx. Excepting maybe Rammstein’s appearance at the beginning of the film, I generally found it boring. It didn’t make use of Vin Diesel’s acting talents (well nothing outside of the Riddick movies really has) and at its worst tried and failed to be a Bond movie. The action sequences didn’t particularly appeal to me either.

xXx: The Next LevelSo now we have Ice Cube in a very gratuitous sequel. First of all, the ‘Cube isn’t really a top notch performer. Every time he speaks it sounds like he’s rapping, pummeling home the lines sans bass backbeat. Samuel L. Jackson is fine, but I’m not quite sure why he’s signed up for this franchise… And surely Willem Dafoe has played this character before? (All I can say is I hope he got paid a bunch).

The story, whilst ludicrous, is certainly better than another Bond rehash (although strangely enough director Tamahori recently did do Die Another Day). I wouldn’t be surprised if this script was written simply as an action movie, then later on had the xXx label stuck on. There are some nicely blunt political statements made throughout the movie, and we have a bit of a dickhead as the president (though let’s not forget James Cromwell’s president in The Sum Of All Fears saying ‘nucular’… or indeed the real one…). This film is quite distinct from the original in that it focuses on hip hop culture rather than extreme sports, and features a couple of rap stars taking on the predominantly white bad guys in an effort to save America from itself. (Xzibit does a pretty good job, by the way.) I imagine Lee Tamahori was a prime choice of director given his Maori background and the fantastic Once Were Warriors.

The film gets decidedly worse towards the end, with some ludicrously bad special effects and badly handled action scenes. And Scott Speedman’s never gonna live down his role in the climax.

Overall however, I enjoyed this a lot more than the original. At least it had an interesting subtext to work with.

Rating: 2.0 stars
Review by Stuart Wilson, 1st January 1970
Hoopla Factor: 2.5 stars


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