Exit Wounds Movie Review
Exit Wounds Review

"Exit Wounds" Overview

Rating: R
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Andrzej BartkowiakProducer : Joel Silver,Dan Cracchiolo
Screenwiter : Ed Horowitz,Richard D’Ovidio
Starring : Steven Seagal,DMX,Tom Arnold,Isaiah Washington,Bill Duke,Michael Jai White
To watch a Steven Seagal film, one must fully suspend all disbelief. And to
fully enjoy the audacity of Seagal, one must ignore all of the consequences
associated with the following: Starting fistfights with large men in flashy
nightclubs, destroying everything in sight along the way. Surviving every
semi-automatic gun battle and car crash without a scratch. Purchasing Italian
racing cars with bundles of $100 bills stuffed in a gym bag. Actually being
able to cash out stock options from a dot-com and then creating a private
surveillance unit devoted to uncovering a ring of corrupt Detroit cops involved
in smuggling heroin inside of sweatshop-produced t-shirts. OK... maybe that
corrupt cops thing is a bit hard to swallow.
I remember a time when I used to enjoy Seagal. Such films as Above the Law,
Hard to Kill, Marked for Death, Under Siege, and Out for Justice are all solid
action films from the ‘90s. Under Siege is even kind of good. But lately,
films like Under Siege 2, Fire Down Below, and The Patriot have shown the age
of the Italian stallion of Aikido.
Now, Exit Wounds stands as Seagal’s biggest failure, a pitiful reminder of the
death of the American action film. By overextending the violence, the
ludicrousness, and the sheer improbability of everything, Exit Wounds plays out
like a circus of the damned with Tom Arnold working the Tilt-A-Whirl.
(Speaking of Tom Arnold, it’s always a bad sign when his thespian attempts at
comedy are the most memorable parts of a film.)
Exit Wounds is bad -- really, really bad. Should you care about the plot, the
mighty Steven plays Orin Boyd, a burned out cop without his trademark pony-nub
who gets reassigned to a tough Detroit precinct after saving the
Vice-President's life during a Michigan militia terrorist act. Apparently,
this particular precinct is filled with police officers who use the gym way too
much, use stun guns in strange naked homoerotic bonding moments, and routinely
steal heroin from police labs to fund those out-of-state fishing trips so
popular among Detroit city cops. Then there's DMX, the hardcore
rapper-turned-actor who does a better job in his music videos than in this role
as a stereotypical drug dealer/club owner/martial arts master/dot-com
entrepreneur. Seagal and DMX team up to stop the corrupt cop ring, run by
Michael Jai White (Spawn).
The gratuitous violence of Exit Wounds would have made Peckinpah cringe and
reach for the stop button on the remote. In earlier Seagal films, you got
brief moments of violence that made the films memorable and not so gory. Exit
Wounds overflows with carnage -- people being bloodied by fists wrapped in
chains, body parts being impaled on exposed bolts and pipes, people being
crushed by oncoming cars and buses. And every single car involved in a chase
sequence erupts in flames, of course.
The biggest shame of the film is the misuse of Seagal. Instead of having
Seagal demonstrate the prowess and speed of a 7th Dan of Aikido, shown off so
well in his earlier films, he ends up being nothing more than a patsy, used to
connect the dots of all the inane plot points in what stands as a truly rotten
film.
Trebly wounded.
Reviewer: Max Messier





