Rampage
Dir: Brad Peyton
2018
***
Rampage has received some pretty damning reviews since its release, it’s
almost as if people have taken it too seriously. Don’t get me wrong, big dumb
action blockbusters aren’t always a means of escapism, I like to switch
off my brain occasionally and watch something big and ridiculous just as much
as the next guy (and I eat my popcorn by the tonne) but there is a fine line
between fun and not fun. A good example of not fun would be director Brad
Peyton and Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s 2015 earthquake actioner San Andreas.
Expectations of their third collaboration (they also made Journey 2: The
Mysterious Island together) were pretty low indeed, probably made worse by the
fact that Rampage looked a bit like San Andreas but with the inclusion of a big
monkey and a large dog. Expectations exceeded – but in the opposite direction.
I enjoyed it quite a lot. I can’t justify a four star rating but I have to say
I am tempted, as it was a film worthy of the largest size bucket
of popcorn the cinema had to sell. I vaguely remember the
original video game on which the story is based and remember being unimpressed
with it but liking the concept, I had no idea how they could adapt it into a
film. I’m still rather staggered by how they achieved it to be honest, because
even though the concept is utter nonsense, it was weirdly believable. Jurassic
Park’s science is flawed but we all love that, Jaws passed down family-specific
vengeance in her genes – utter nonsense but it’s a classic, and with
all the love in the world, Independence Day is one of the stupidest
films ever made – I’ve seen it a hundred times. I was fine with the premise
that secret genetic experiments are happening on a space station orbiting the
earth - I love a bit of space action. The idea that the dangerous samples
crash-landed on earth and were discovered by two wild animals and a giant
zoo-dwelling albino gorilla was also acceptable. The fact that said space
station was destroyed by a giant rat did stretch
me believability somewhat but it was an idea that was more than okay
with me. In the original Midway Game, the large angry animals were all
originally humans that had been experimented on, so this idea is far simpler
and made sense in a funny sort of way. The science is flawed for sure but the
idea is free from convolution. Sure, there was always a helicopter lying
around when our heroes needed one and the script and certain scenarios could
have been tweaked but apart from that the film is refreshingly pure. It’s giant
gorilla, big wolf and humongous alligator vs the city and
then eventually vs each other. There is also a justified reason for
Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s character to be involved. The suited executives are
the bad guys and the only government official you can trust is dressed like a
cowboy – it’s standard big dumb action movie logic and its okay. Who doesn’t
like Dwayne Johnson? The scenes with him and his mate George the giant albino
gorilla are rather sweet and the animal vs animal scenes
are genuinely exciting. The film’s villain has one of the best exits
I’ve seen since Shark Attack 3 and not one of the cast members or
character annoyed me. It is big and dumb but it is heaps of fun, mainly down to
the ridiculously good science fiction elements and the fact that the concept is
stupidly cool. The negativity I’ve read for this film seems a little harsh in
light of how charming Rampage is. To fault it on its science is silly, to
dismiss it based on Peyton’s previous efforts is also unfair. It goes without
saying that it isn’t for everyone and it’ll never go down in history as a
classic but there is plenty of fun to be had. If that’s not enough to convince
you then consider this – infamously bad director Uwe
Boll threatened to file a lawsuit against Warner Bros. if the studio did not
change the film's title. Boll, who produced and directed an unrelated Rampage film
trilogy, claimed that the Warner Bros. film would "shrink" his brand
and revenues he could use for future installments of his Rampage films.
He also went on to say that the Warner Bros. film "confuses the
audience" and is "one of those typical feelgood, popcorn bullshit
movies that the studios use to brainwash America even more!” If Uwe Boll
questions a film’s quality, then it can’t be that bad!
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