12 Rounds Movie Review
12 Rounds Review
"12 Rounds" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Renny HarlinProducer : Becki Cross Trujillo,Mark Gordon,Renny Harlin,Mike Lake,Josh McLaughlin,Vince McMahon
Screenwiter : Daniel Kunka
Starring : John Cena,Ashley Scott,Aidan Gillen,Steve Harris,Brian White
You might think that 12 Rounds is the exact same movie as The Marine, an
already-forgotten 2007 action movie also starring
wrestler-turned-pretty-much-still-just-a-wrestler John Cena, but you'd be
wrong. In The Marine, Cena plays an unstoppable marine whose wife gets
kidnapped by very bad men. In 12 Rounds, Cena plays an unstoppable police
officer whose girlfriend gets kidnapped by a very bad Irishman. Completely
different.
Cena, to his credit, shows slightly more dimension in his second starring
vehicle. As Detective Danny Fisher, he expresses a surprising (for an action
hero) amount of guilt over a bust of master criminal/terrorist Miles Jackson
(Aidan Gillen), the aforementioned Irishman, which resulted in the accidental
death of Jackson's equally psychotic lady love. Exactly one year later, as both
the subtitles and expositional dialogue tell us, Jackson resurfaces to exact
his revenge: He takes Fisher's beloved Molly (Ashley Scott), and puts the cop
through a series of death-defying stunts.
In contrast to the elemental stupidity of The Marine, the setup I just
described in a paragraph (and the film's trailer conveys in about 30 seconds)
takes 12 Rounds about half an hour to explain, complete with even more
exposition squawked over police and FBI radio -- strange how the lawmen always
remind each other who the bad guy is and what he's done right before they move
in on him. Neither the excessive exposition nor the Danny Fisher character
development is particularly skillful or entertaining, but they at least show a
little effort.
Further Cena progress can be traced through the types of movies his newest
endeavor rips off. While The Marine was eighties-style junk, 12 Rounds, with
its villain's taunting phone calls and vehicular near-homicides, is more
reminiscent of a Die Hard or Speed knock-off from the mid-nineties. It's even
directed by Renny Harlin, who made Die Hard 2, as well as Deep Blue Sea and The
Long Kiss Goodnight; at his best, he masters the art of the slick knock-off.
Harlin's direction of 12 Rounds is slick, too -- so slick that the movie slips
and slides between unrelated set pieces with restless, constant motion. This
despite the heavy machinery of said pieces, which most often involve creative
use of vehicles: a hurtling boat used to stop a car, a fire engine driven on a
train platform, or a car used to cut off a trolley's electrical supply.
That last bit, with Cena nonchalantly hopping between his car and the runaway
trolley, is actually sort of fun. Also fun, or at least laugh-out-loud funny:
the climactic moment in which Fisher tussles with the bad guy, and his
girlfriend helpfully calls out: "Danny, he's got a gun!" She'd be great on the
police radio.
But even with those hilarious bits and the incremental technical advancement it
shows from the humble beginnings of The Marine, 12 Rounds suffers from more or
less the same problem: it's stupid, but not quite delightfully stupid. Cena's
brawn doesn't have much personality, nor does it achieve a transcendent lack of
personality. His movies are instant relics, narrowly escaping a horrific
direct-to-DVD death. For now.
Vows one day to make a movie with The Rock.
|
Review by Jesse Hassenger
|






