Once again we visit the dark and rain slick streets of
Frank Miller’s Sin City and along for the ride is our old pal
Robert Rodriguez, so “
Fasten your seat belts, it’s going to be a bumpy night.”
If you’ve seen the first movie you know what you are in for and if
you haven’t basically Frank Miller tries to outdo Mickey Spillane and
Raymond Chandler in a very stylized graphic way. Based on several
stories from the Miller’s graphic novels, as well as two written for
this movie, we get an interesting anthology mix of timelines as this
movie is both a sequel to the 2005 movie as well as a prequel. If
someone was to try and cut these two films into some kind of sequential
continuity they’d probably develop an aneurism.
Godfather II this is not.
“I’ve got a condition.”
Marv (
Mickey Rourke) is back and laying waste to near do wells in his usual brutal fashion, he’s still in love with Nancy (
Jessica Alba)
but in a rather platonic way. It’s fun to see this gladiatorial monster
tear through all opponents, but after a while even that can grow
tiresome. Nancy is still the most famous stripper who never takes off
her clothes, but now she’s getting drunk and taking target practice to
get revenge against Roark (
Powers Boothe) who is the man responsible for the death of Hartigan (
Bruce Willis) who now watches Nancy from beyond the grave.
“I see dead people.”
Johnny (
Joseph Gordon-Levitt)
is a cocky gambler that claims “I never lose” but when he goes up
against Senator Roark in a backroom card game he finds out that the
cards on the table aren’t the only things in play. Sadly this story
goes nowhere, returns to add no further information, and then abruptly
ends without a point.
Dead man’s plot.
Dwight (Now being played by
Josh Brolin) has tried to leave Old Town but a call from old flame Ava (
Eva Green) drags him back to the bad ole days. She is the titular “
A Dame to Kill For”
and because she is being played by Eva Green we completely buy that.
Ava claims that she is trapped in a horrifying marriage by her abusive
billionaire husband. Does she truly love Dwight or is there a darker
play at hand?
“I loved you in Goonies.”
Ava is the quintessential Frank Miller character as she is cold
heartless bitch from which there is no escape. The amount of times women
in these films are called either a whore or a bitch certainly lends one
to believe Mister Miller may have issues with women. This is Eva Greens
second outing in Frank Miller adaptation, she played the chief
villainous in the abysmal
300: Rise of an Empire, but
this time out her character is slightly more interesting though even
more underdressed. Seriously, she is naked a lot in this movie
This film is also littered with an excellent selection of character actors with the likes of
Ray Liotta,
Christopher Meloni,
Jeremy Piven,
Stacy Keach, and
Christopher Lloyd filling out the cast, and for the most part they were entertaining if not a little wasted.
Rosario Dawson is back as the dominatrix hung up on Dwight, and
Jamie Chung has replaced
Devon Aoki as the Old Town’s resident ninja.
Dennis Haysbert steps in as Manute the evil chauffeur previously played by the late
Michael Clarke Duncan,
now as much as I like Haysbert as an actor he doesn’t have the same
physical presence that Michael Clarke Duncan possessed and that is
greatly missed here.
“I may have lost a little weight…and an eye.”
The cast performances vary from decent to phoning it in, but given
that many of the performances are buried under the incessant Mickey
Spillane narration that goes on for bloody ever that is to be expected.
The acting is not the real problem here but the pacing is, though with
only a running time of 102 minutes it felt like I was in the theatre for
over two hours.
Eva Green and Stacy Keach are Beauty and the Beast.
Visually the film does pop, like it or hate it the digital back lot
provides unique visual tools in bringing a graphic novel to life. Now in
the 3D it even works better, but what was interesting to me was the
fact that the 3D segments that used actually comic panels worked even
better. This leads one to believe a
Sin City movie may
have always been meant to be animated. Though I’m guessing Hollywood is
currently not up to bank rolling adult animated features.
If you enjoyed the first
Sin City movie you more than likely will enjoy this outing and if you didn’t then there is nothing here to change your mind.
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