Bandidas Movie Review
Bandidas Review

"Bandidas" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Joachim Roenning,Espen SandbergProducer : Luc Besson
Screenwiter : Luc Besson,Robert Mark Kamen
Starring : Salma Hayek,Penélope Cruz,Steve Zahn,Dwight Yoakam,Denis Arndt,Audra Blaser,Sam Shepard
In the history of really silly wigs, Dwight Yoakam’s long, crimped black hair
in Bandidas has gone and snuck its way into the top ten. It’s part of the
silliness of the film that stops it from being a truly terrible movie. That
being said, there’s no other compliments I can ratchet out for this sucker.
It’s the old west and things aren’t well. Tyler Jackson (Yoakam) has used a
six-shooter to take over much of the land in Mexico, and wants to use all of
this to make connections and money through big time land developers. He makes a
mistake when he shoots the father of Maria (Penélope Cruz) and poisons the
wealthy father of Sara (Selma Hayek). After some squabbling over class, they
decide to pair up as bank robbers and steal all of Jackson’s money, getting
tips from retired bank robber Bill Buck (Sam Shepard, why?). They eventually
pair with a forensic psychologist (Steve Zahn) who starts falling for both the
girls as they plan to breach Jackson’s big vault.
Entertainment isn’t in short supply here but freshness, in any form, is. Many
will no doubt defend it as “escapism,” which by all means is fine. Bandidas,
however, is not escapism. The film never asks us to give over, never allows us
to accept its personality, and its action as grandiose enough to make us not
care about the story. Every scene is so obvious and so familiar that it never
allows us even the smallest amount of surprise (even Armageddon had that). Call
it Wild Wild West with women, except even that movie had crazy computer
graphics to keep you interested.
Hayek and Cruz work well together, but with a bunko script by Luc Besson (how
the same brain that made The Professional spewed this out is beyond me) and
by-the-books directing from Joachim Roenning and Espen Sandberg, they don’t
have much to work with. Steve Zahn, a great sideman, is completely pointless to
the film in almost every aspect. The first scene has Zahn studying a crime
scene, but he is ultimately used as a simple reason to have a love story. Worse
than that, the love story is limp as an overcooked noodle. There’s one scene
where the girls practice kissing on Zahn, which Hayek steams up with ample
talent. Besides that scene, all the eroticism that Hayek and Cruz are notorious
for bringing to films is sadly absent. What is left is a heist western that is
devoid of thrills, sizzle, or any real humor. Well, except the wig. I love that
wig.
Well it looks pretty good so far.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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