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XXX: State of the Union Movie Review
XXX: State of the Union Review

"XXX: State of the Union" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Lee TamahoriProducer : Neal H. Moritz,Arne Schmidt
Screenwiter : Simon Kinberg
Starring Ice Cube, Scott Speedman, Samuel L Jackson, Willem Dafoe
Who says sequels are never better than their predecessors? Megabudget producers
have hammered away at proving this maxim wrong, primarily through sequelizing
as many crummy movies as good ones. Sure, a movie like The Matrix sets a
gratifyingly high bar for its successors, but it’s quite the opposite for films
like XXX, Tomb Raider, and Resident Evil; hardly any effort at all is needed to
surpass the original.
And hardly any effort is often what they get, which brings us to XXX: State of
the Union. This follow-up to XXX, the 2002 extreme-sports-and-videogames-themed
James Bond knockoff, is markedly superior. Which is to say it is slightly less
tedious, slightly less blatant in its idiocy, and still miles away from working
as a competent action movie.
State of the Union drops the “extreme” demo-mongering of the first film, but
its dialogue still can’t shake marketing speak: Samuel L. Jackson, back as
triple-X guru Augustus Gibbons, actually has to say, out loud, that he needs a
new agent with “more attitude.” The film awards this arduous task to Ice Cube,
calling upon all of his most potent scowling reserves. He plays Darius Stone, a
thug turned Navy SEAL turned mutineer turned prisoner turned secret agent,
recruited after a siege at the triple-X headquarters. This is part of a plot by
Secretary of Defense Deckert (Willem Dafoe) to overthrow the U.S. government.
The invasion and recruitment happens so swiftly, though, that even the other
characters seem confused; NSA agent Kyle Steele (Scott Speedman) spends about
half the movie chasing after Gibbons and Stone, for reasons not entirely clear.
(The frame job Dafoe’s character wants to set up is almost unnecessary.) The
remaining triple-X personnel take their adventures so far underground that they
forget to come up for fresh air.
Cube is, at least, a more convincing and more likable rogue agent than Vin
Diesel (the 2002 model), and the prospect of seeing him engage in a scowl-off
with Jackson hangs tantalizingly in front of the audience for most of the film
(the tiebreaker would be a yell-off and, of course, Jackson would win). But
their relationship never connects; State of the Union is free of even the
basics of human interactions. It depends instead on weirdly manufactured
antagonism: Stone and Gibbons are supposed to have a vaguely contentious
relationship (hence the scowling), but it’s revealed early on that they’ve more
or less always been on the same side, and it’s Deckert who really earns their
ire. The screenplay then goes as far as to invent another old grudge between
Stone and one of Deckert’s henchmen, just so we can hear Cube proclaim, out
loud, that he has a “score to settle.”
All of this only somewhat resembles XXX, with nods towards over-elaborate,
under-used gadgets and plenty of car-porn. I am reluctant to describe any of
the enjoyably outlandish action sequences, because it might be enough to
convince action connoisseurs, erroneously, that the film is worth seeing; on
paper, tanks fighting on a battleship or a luxury car chasing a bullet train
sound like good fun. The director, Lee Tamahori, made one of the best recent
Bond pictures, but here lacks the ability (or maybe simply the energy) to
finesse the stunts and likable actors into inspired silliness. State of the
Union’s chintzy effects work and quasi-military quasi-thrills actually bring to
mind a cheesy late-eighties action picture, albeit with less appalling
politics. Ice Cube’s scowl contains more charm than the entire careers of the
Norris-Seagal-Van Damme crew, so what’s he doing here?
The DVD includes two commentaries, deleted scenes, and a handful of making-of
featurettes, including Ice Cube's personal retrospective.
Aka xXx2.
xXxplosive!
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger
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