Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever Movie Review
Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever Review

"Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Wych KaosayanandaProducer : Chris Lee,Elie Samaha,Andrew Stevens
Screenwiter : Alan McElroy
Starring : Antonio Banderas,Lucy Liu,Ray Park,Terry Chen,Aidan Drummond
Pay good money to see Ballistic: Ecks Vs. Sever and you have nobody but
yourself to blame. The signs, after all, shine so bright in warning you about
this waste of brain cells that Stevie Wonder sent me an e-mail earlier this
week telling me Ballistic would stink on ice.
Heck, even Stevie Wonder jokes are fresher than the Ballistic script. Blessed
with the most ridiculous title in recent memory, Ballistic pits icy cool
Antonio Banderas against smoldering hot Lucy Liu and watches the sparks fly.
And fly. Then explode. And then fly some more. Liu, as rogue DIA agent
Sever, kidnaps a child who’s unknowingly carrying the latest invention of an
unidentified shadow government. The device turns soldiers into flawless
assassins. Eager to get their own hands on the device, the FBI blackmails
former agent Jeremiah Ecks (Banderas) into stopping Sever and retrieving the
boy.
First-time director Wych Kaosayananda prefers to go by the shortened Kaos. It’
s pronounced “chaos,” and now we know why. Someone test this man for attention
deficit disorder, for he can’t go ten minutes without destroying something.
And not just lighting it up … I mean full on decimation. Ballistic has three
or four unrelated, pre-planned action set pieces, and screenwriter Alan McElroy
receives the thankless task of connecting them with the thinnest of plot
threads. Needless to say, he doesn’t do a very good job.
Not that I was expecting a Jane Austen period romance, but a little plot with
my C4 goes a long, long way. Kaos does avoid using tired Matrix gimmicks to
spice up his action, preferring an old fashioned slow motion shot. These
almost provide Ballistic with a quaint retro feel characteristic of
international spy thrillers circa 1975, when burned out heroes banished to
rain-soaked foreign locales (really Vancouver) raced against a gaggle of
anonymous government cells to save the planet.
Few actors could pull off Ecks, and Banderas reminds us that he’s one of them.
Played like the evil twin to Gregorio Cortez from the Spy Kids franchise,
Banderas buries every other line of dialogue underneath a wet blanket of
boredom and disdain. He’s the lone treat in Ballistic, but even he grows
tiresome before long. Liu never breaks a sweat or shows emotion, making it
difficult to care about her existence. In addition, her backstory takes a back
seat to Ecks’ history, even though his makes less sense as the movie moves
along. References are made to a family she lost, but we’re never sure how or
why.
Ballistic also needs better baddies. Roger R. Cross, playing the criminal
mastermind behind the convoluted central scam, is a poor man’s Gary Busey, who’
s a poor man’s Robert Mitchum himself. And Ray Park without any sort of
make-up just isn’t scary. Girls could kick his tail, and in Ballistic, a girl
does.
It’s impossible to single out the one or two things that went wrong with this
masochistic game of one-upmanship between the director and his inner demon. In
reality, nothing works. Thirty minutes into Ballistic, I scratched my head at
the muddled plot and stuck my fingers in my ears. Sixty minutes in, I wanted
to pull Kaos’ well-worn copy of Hard Boiled out of his VCR and beat him
senseless with it. After ninety minutes, it was time to leave. One more
minute and I would have gone ballistic myself.
If you really want to try your patience, check out the bonus feature on the
Ballistic DVD: an Ecks vs. Sever version of rock-scissors-paper! Yes, now
there's a way to settle those bar bets, civilized-style.
Feel Antonio's close shave!
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





