Torque Movie Review
Torque Review

"Torque" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Joseph KahnProducer : Neal H. Moritz,Brad Luff
Screenwiter : Matt Johnson
Starring : Martin Henderson,Ice Cube,Monet Mazur,Jay Hernandez
The tagline on the poster for Torque says nothing about motorcycles. It simply
reads: “From the Producer of The Fast and the Furious, XXX, and S.W.A.T.”
And a brand is born.
Torque, a ridiculous yarn about biker gangs in California’s high desert, bears
all the absurd CGI-enhanced action, groaner dialogue, and gash-ridden plots of
Neal H. Moritz’s aforementioned prior productions, but for the first hour at
least, it almost works. Sadly, the final act then disintegrates into a
spine-rattling mess of crashes, gun blasts, detonations, and “How the hell did
they survive that?”
The striking Martin Henderson (previously seen being stalked by a TV phantom in
The Ring) credibly pulls off the hero role as Clay "Ford" Ford, an independent
biker who returns to the Mojave sands after hiding from the FBI in Thailand for
six months. Ford has come back to rekindle the romance with his girlfriend
Shane (the alluringly-named Monet Mazur), a bike repair goddess who took the
brunt of Ford’s flight from the law. Ford also hooks up with his two buddies
(Will Yun Lee and crazy/beautiful’s Jay Hernandez) to settle the score with a
bad-ass named “Henry James” (no, really), the drug-smuggling leader of the
Hellions gang.
Meanwhile, Ford’s also gotten on the wrong side of Trey (Ice Cube), boss of the
Reapers, an all-black gang from L.A. When Henry James sets up Ford for the
murder of Trey’s little brother, our tribe of good guys (and gal) go on the lam
from the Reapers, the Hellions, and two highly unconventional FBI agents in a
Hummer.
From the opening shot, first-time director Joseph Kahn – who cut his teeth
making music videos, natch – lets the movie’s inner comic book take over. Where
it works – the leathery costumes, the off-road pursuits, the slick staging, the
motorcycle fu – it really works, often brilliantly. Where it fails – the
beyond-reason gunfights at 200 mph, the failure of people to die from bullets,
explosions, and violent crashes – it feels like a very special episode of The
A-Team, and not just because Ice Cube seems to be channeling Mr. T for the
better part of the flick.
Cube, now shockingly 15 years removed from NWA, may not have been the best
casting choice for the role of Trey. After playing good guys for the past
decade of his film career, including complicated and sensitive roles in Three
Kings and Barbershop, his performance lacks the menace of his younger days in
Raiders gear.
But Cube seems like Olivier-as-Hamlet compared to the casting of Jaime Pressly
as China, Henry’s gothy, violence-fetishist girlfriend. Pressly, her supermodel
looks adorned with biker tats and face piercings, barely speaks but spends so
much time licking her glossed lips that her tongue should demand its own agent.
What’s worse are the repeatedly guffaw-inducing product placements, including a
battle of “PEPSI” vs. “MOUNTAIN DEW” that distracts from Shane's inevitable
bad-girl-fight with China. Oh yeah, also the main character is named “Ford,”
and all the non-motorcycle vehicles are manufactured by… one guess.
Perhaps the only real accomplishment of Torque is the establishment of
Henderson as a credible action lead. He reveals Paul Walker, star of the
Furious vehicles, for the 90210 reject he really is.
But sadly, there's a movie going on around Henderson, and it's just another
PG-13 violence-and-cleavage flick, formulated to bring in young, multiethnic
male audiences. If you miss this one, don't feel too bad. There’ll be another
in about five weeks.
And hey, it's on DVD now, with two commentary tracks ("actor" and "technical")
and two storyboard/final cut comparisons. The usual music videos and trailers
can also be found on the disc.
All revved up and nowhere to go.
Reviewer: Eric Meyerson



