5 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Queasy Rider, 1 August 2008
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
If there's another word for idiocy, I think that word is GHOST RIDER.
Sloppy editing, directionless direction and idiotic writing make this
the number one feel-retarded movie of the year. And Nicolas Cage in
eternal mourning-faced mode as the Ghost Rider doesn't help any. He is
stunt biker, Johnny Blaze, employed by the devil (Peter Fonda,
embarrassing himself) to stop the devil's son dominating the world. Oh
yeh, and when he turns into Ghost Rider, his head turns into a flaming
skull. For no reason other than it looks kinda cool.
Sam Elliott lends his balls-grit voice to the narration and appears as
a supernatural gravedigger, but even that compounds the stupidity. His
first lines narrate how every generation spawns a Ghost Rider, whose
job is to collect souls sold to Satan. Okay, nice premise now start
confusing me
Seems the Wild West Ghost Rider (from the 1800s, I'm
guessing) "outran the devil himself" because he didn't want to collect
1000 souls on one particularly meaty contract.
Where to start with the stupid questions, knowing there'll be stupid
answers at the end of all of them? Is it within the Ghost Rider's
capacity to discern how many souls the devil should be bagging? He's
just an apprehender, a bounty hunter; it's like bequeathing that
redneck moron Dog the Bounty Hunter or one of those Nazi cops from COPS
jurisprudence and the ability to execute sentences on nothing but their
own cognizance, when we all know they are merely apprehenders with zero
powers or intelligence beyond clicking on cuffs.
So what about the Rules for Supernatural Beings? How fast can the devil
run? And since the Ghost Rider is a supernatural being himself, how
fast was HE actually running to outrun the devil? And was he galloping
across desert plains, or in some other dimension? If in some other
dimension, were they "running" physically - with feet touching the
ground for traction, or in some invisible medium? Any answers from
geekboys forthcoming?
Every single minute of GHOST RIDER raises more idiotic questions about
supernatural rules. For example, the GHOST RIDER is a supernatural
being, so when evil supernatural beings fight him (beings fashioned
from earth, air, fire and water), why do they bother punching each
other? They're not operating on the same rules we are in the physical
plane for cryin' out loud, when a truck runs into the Ghost Rider he
is unharmed, so why does the being made of water even *think* that he
could debilitate him by PUNCHING? Or hanging him by the neck with a
chain?
Later, a supernatural being made of wind laughs when Ghost Rider tries
to punch him, then he eats crow when the Rider whirls his whip around
and somehow creates a vortex of fire that sucks the wind being into
nothingness. Riiiiight
..
At one point, like some kind of superhero, Ghost Rider saves a girl
from a pursesnatcher and then condemns the pursesnatcher to hell as if
he had lied Amerika into a false Iraq war, causing the deaths of
100,000 people and consigning Amerika to a trillion-dollar debt which
four generations would have to shoulder. It's the SUPERMAN conundrum:
while he saves a cat in a tree, a million African children die for want
of diverting a river to save their village. Get your priorities right,
Bonehead!
Marvel really screwed the pooch with this D-Lister; Stan Lee didn't
even bother making a cameo. The origin tale works gangbusters as a
comicbook, but in this age of semi-realism in Marvel films (SPIDERMAN,
X-MEN, PUNISHER), GHOST RIDER gasps for credibility with its insanely
convoluted mythical storyline and rule-less landscape.
Frumpy Eva Mendez is Johnny Blaze's long-suffering romantic interest,
Wes Bentley gives a pointless performance as the devil's son, and Donal
Logue tries overacting to save the movie. Didn't work, but at least
he's got some cheese for his demo reel.
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