SONY
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MOVIE INFO
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Director:
Rob Cohen
Cast:
Vin Diesel, Samuel L. Jackson, Asia Argento, Marton Csokas, Joe Bucaro III
Writing Credits:
Rich Wilkes
Synopsis:
Extreme sports athlete Xander Cage is recruited by the government for a special mission.
Box Office:
Budget $85 million.
Opening weekend $44.506 million on 3374 screens.
Domestic gross $141.204 million.
MPAA:
Rated PG-13
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DISC DETAILS
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Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audio:
English DTS-HD MA 5.1
Czech Dolby 5.1
French (Quebecois) Dolby 5.1
French (Parisian) Dolby 5.1
German Dolby 5.1
Hungarian Dolby 5.1
Italian Dolby 5.1
Portuguese Dolby 5.1
Russian Dolby 5.1
Spanish (Castillian) Dolby 5.1
Spanish (Latin) Dolby 5.1
Thai Dolby 5.1
Subtitles:
English
Arabic
Bulgarian
Chinese Traditional
Croatian
Czech
Dutch
French
German
Greek
Hungarian
Icelandic
Italian
Korean
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovene
Spanish (Castillian)
Spanish (Latin)
Thai
Turkish
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
French
Spanish
Italian
German
Runtime: 124 min.
Price: $19.98
Release Date: 1/10/2017
Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Director Rob Cohen
• “Origins of a Renegade” Featurette
• “A Filmmaker’s Diary” Documentary
• “Diesel Powered” Featurette
• “Building Speed: The Vehicles of xXx” Featurette
• “Designing the World of xXx” Featurette
• Deleted Scenes with Optional Director’s Commentary
• Visual Effects “How to’s”
• “Agent Shavers’ Gadget Presentation” Featurette
• “The End Credit Sequence - Raw and Uncut”
• Music Videos
• “Starz! On the Set - The Making of xXx”
• Theatrical Trailer
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PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM
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EQUIPMENT
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Panasonic TC-P60VT60 60-Inch 1080p 600Hz 3D Smart Plasma HDTV; Sony STR-DG1200 7.1 Channel Receiver; Panasonic DMP-BD60K Blu-Ray Player using HDMI outputs; Michael Green Revolution Cinema 6i Speakers (all five); Kenwood 1050SW 150-watt Subwoofer.
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RELATED REVIEWS
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xXx: 15th Anniversary Edition [Blu-Ray] (2002)
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Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (January 19, 2017)
Apparently the folks behind 2002’s xXx thought we needed a new 007, for that’s how they touted their summer action flick. Advance word on xXx pushed it as a Bond adventure for the extreme sports set; they hoped to make the super-spy seem outdated and obsolete with their new chrome-domed, tattooed, muscular thrill-seeker.
It didn’t work - not that xXx didn’t do pretty well at the box office. Its gross of $141 million fell short of studio expectations, but it still offered a pretty tidy sum for an action flick with no established stars. Lead actor Vin Diesel had made a decent name for himself as of 2002, but he wasn’t exactly a household name.
For me to accept xXx as something that superceded Bond, the former needed to make much more money than the latter. As luck would have it, a new 007 adventure hit screens less than half a year after xXx, as Die Another Day came out around Thanksgiving of 2002. Day surpassed the gross of xXx by a little in the US, and by a lot overseas.
Which meant that audiences didn’t quite feel the need to toss aside Bond for a new secret agent. The Bourne movies stole some of Bond’s thunder, but the xXx franchise never really got off the ground – though a new 2017 film offers an attempted resurgence.
Maybe that one will work, but the original doesn’t. xXx provides a terribly disappointing experience, as it offered one of the weakest major action movies I’d seen in quite a while when it came out in 2002.
xXx quickly introduces its main setting, as we venture to the Czech Republic. There an American agent named McGrath (Thomas Ian Griffith) gets killed at a boisterous nightclub party hosted by Yorgi (Martin Csokas), the joint’s owner and the leader of a subversive group called Anarchy 99.
McGrath’s death makes him the third spy murdered on the job, and the powers back at the National Security Agency need to think outside the proverbial box. Scar-faced Augustus Gibbons (Samuel L. Jackson) brings up an unorthodox proposal to use the “best and brightest of the bottom of the barrel”: criminals who have the savvy and wherewithal to better integrate into these seeding settings.
We then meet Xander Cage (Vin Diesel), the dude who evokes the “XXX” of the title. An extreme sports superstar, he steals the Corvette owned by State Senator Dick Hotchkiss (Tom Everett), a full-formed prick who opposes everything dear to Xander’s crowd: skateboarding, rap music, and video games. Xander tapes an anti-Dick monologue as he speeds along in the Corvette, which he then destroys in a big stunt.
When authorities capture Xander, he think it’s because of the theft, but in actuality, this occurs at Gibbons’ behest. After Xander wakes, he finds himself in a diner, where he receives a test of his abilities. He passes this, and Gibbons lets him know the deal. Xander then immediately gets sent to Colombia for another test, though this one seems much more real.
Xander aces that challenge as well, and Gibbons gives him an ultimatum. Either Xander joins forces with the NSA as an agent or he goes to jail. Not surprisingly, Xander chooses the latter, and he soon finds himself in Prague, where he meets Yorgi and the rest of the Anarchy 99 crew. This includes Yelena (Asia Argento), a sexy sidekick with whom Xander flirts.
Once Xander proves himself to Yorgi, he becomes part of Anarchy 99. He eventually starts to learn that the organization’s work goes beyond simple drug trafficking and the usual crimes. In fact, Yorgi wants to cause the destruction of all governments and plans to do so with the aid of “Silent Night”, a rather virulent chemical weapon. Naturally, Xander attempts to stop this.
Except for the manner in which Xander joins the ranks of the NSA, you’ll find virtually nothing in this plot synopsis that would seem out of place in a Bond film. That’s because xXx really is a Bond film. Its creators simply doll up the events in a scungier setting and toss in less suave participants all across the board.
That’s right, everything about xXx is extreme - as in, extremely asinine. The movie attempts so hard to become something new and set itself apart from other flicks in the genre that it feels like a seven-year-old at a party who desperately screams and flails as he tries to attract attention. Director Rob Cohen piles on so much aggressive action and music that the whole thing becomes one big incoherent blur after awhile.
Of course, Cohen also wants to make sure we know how much cooler xXx when compared to Bond. The opening scene ensures that during a bit straight out of Goldfinger, Agent McGrath slips out of his work clothes to reveal a tuxedo.
Never mind that True Lies already spoofed this gag eight years earlier. xXx uses it to declare its intentions, for we quickly see how a Bond-esque agent won’t cut it in the modern world.
That scene offers the first of many howlers in which I found it impossible to suspend disbelief. Sure, Bond flicks include scads of scenes that bear no resemblance to real life.
However, I’ll accept all of its absurd stunts and gags before I’ll see the logic in sending a milquetoast white boy in a tux to a party filled with revelers who look like the undead amid the aggressive rantings of over the top German rockers Rammstein. How stupid would an agent need to be to think that he’d blend in there while clad in formal attire?
Things get worse with our introduction to Xander. I suppose his theft of the jerky senator’s Corvette is supposed to endear him to us in some sort of revolutionary “man of the people” way, but frankly, it just makes him look equally horrible.
When we don’t agree with someone, the way to change that is to steal a car and destroy it for one’s own glorification? Sorry, but that just doesn’t cut it for me. Being a prick to a prick doesn’t make one cool.
Granted, xXx is supposed to be a cartoon, so perhaps I should take these things less seriously. However, the movie provides such an aggressively annoying experience that I find it tough to let minor transgressions slide.
I can’t recall the last time I saw a protagonist presented in such a genuinely unlikable manner. Maybe some will see Xander as a cool outlaw anti-hero, but he just seems like an obnoxious buffoon to me.
I used to like Diesel, as I thought he brought heart to roles in The Iron Giant and Saving Private Ryan. However, as he became a bigger star, he started to lose that early warmth and charm.
As Xander, Diesel offers virtually no spark or flair, as he makes the character nothing more than a crass and irritating boor. Not only do I not care about Xander, but also as the film progressed, I actively rooted against him!
It doesn’t help that the script furnishes its characters with some of the worst dialogue ever attempted. God save us from xXx’s attempts at humor.
Actually, save us from all of the film’s atrocious dialogue. From Xander’s wacky “where’s the peanuts?” on board a no-frills military plane to Gibbons’ “a small price that I pay for putting foot to ass for my country”, the movie fills its time with genuinely horrible lines. No one expects scintillating repartee from an action film, but this one sinks to exceedingly low levels.
Perhaps I could forgive much of this if xXx delivered with some cool action, but unfortunately, most of the movie simply seems dull. Admittedly, the film’s climactic segment provides some decent thrills, but the rest of the time it comes across as bland.
xXx simply tries too hard to impress us, which undercuts any drama or excitement. Almost nothing stands out, as the material appears very forgettable. 12 hours after I watched the movie, I couldn’t remember much about the stunts, which wasn’t a good sign.
For a movie that wants to distance itself from the world of Bond, xXx works awfully hard to remind us of that legacy. In addition to the opening gag with Agent McGrath, a few other 007 allusions appear.
Most notable is the inclusion of Agent Toby Lee Shavers (Michael Roof), a nerdy MIT-educated version of “Q”. The character feels like a pale imitation, as he brings nothing positive to the movie at all.
xXx includes at least one odd and unexpected cinematic allusion. During an early scene in Prague, we see a performance of some zither music that uses the theme from 1949’s The Third Man.
When I watched the movie, I figured the filmmakers did this as another attempt to distance themselves from spies of the past, as the old-time tune soon gave way to more modern rock. However, it seems like a weird move.
The reference will be lost on 99% of the audience that sees xXx, and the one percent that gets it will simply look back longingly on the infinitely superior Third Man, which undercuts the attempt to move toward the future. During his commentary, Cohen explains he meant this as a bow toward Third Man director Carol Reed, but it still makes little sense to me.
Add to all these problems the annoying and apparently unending shots of Xander’s “xXx” tattoo on his neck and xXx offers a decidedly unlikable affair. I’ve seen worse action flicks, but not too many.
This one works so hard to become something brash and fresh that it comes across as totally self-conscious and forced. In truth, it brings nothing new to the genre, and it fails to provide anything engaging or interesting.
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The Disc Grades: Picture B/ Audio A-/ Bonus B+
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xXx appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This wasn’t the best-looking film, but the image usually satisfied,
Overall sharpness worked well, but not with total consistency. Every once in a while, I saw an oddly soft shot, such as the one in which we first met Gibbons. Still, most of the flick delivered nice delineation.
Jagged edges and moiré effects created no concerns, and I saw no edge haloes. Print flaws seemed absent, so this became a clean presentation.
The movie went with stylized colors that tended to be positive. The hues appeared lively and full throughout the film. Blacks were dark and dense, while low-light shots displayed appealing clarity. The occasional soft spot made this a “B” image but it still worked find most of the time.
I expected the film’s DTS-HD MA 5.1 mix to offer a non-stop auditory barrage on the senses, and I got exactly that. The soundfield provided material from all five channels much of the time, and it did so in a fairly aggressive manner. While this could induce headaches at times, it made sense when paired with the movie’s visuals, so I won’t fault the sound designers.
The effects blended together well, especially when various vehicles zoomed around the spectrum. Other pieces moved cleanly across the speakers, and the five channels integrated well to create a clean and concise sense of setting.
Audio quality also seemed solid. Dialogue was natural and crisp, as the lines lacked any issues related to intelligibility or edginess. Music came across as bright and vivid, with nice bass fidelity throughout the film.
Effects presented concise and accurate imagery, as they sounded detailed and distinct. Bass response could have been a little firmer and more visceral, but the low-end content usually seemed quite deep and powerful. Ultimately, xXx didn’t provide one of the all-time great soundtracks, but it worked quite well nonetheless.
How did the 2017 Blu-ray compare to the original 2006 BD? Audio was a wash, as I didn’t see real changes between the 2006 disc’s PCM mix and this one’s DTS-HD MA track, but visuals offered clear improvements. The old BD was a mushy mess, so even with some lackluster spots, the 2017 release became a definite step-up.
While the 2006 Blu-ray lacked any extras, the 2017 “15th Anniversary Edition” reinstates materials from the 2002 DVD as well as the 2005 Director’s Cut DVD. These open with an audio commentary from director Rob Cohen. He provides a fairly lively and entertaining running and screen-specific piece.
The veteran of commentaries for early films such as The Fast and the Furious and Dragonheart, Cohen clearly feels comfortable with the format, and he offers an engaging chat. Much of the tracks deals with the movie’s myriad technical concerns, so we learn a lot about the stunts and effects.
However, the piece never becomes dry or tedious, and Cohen peppers it with other notes from the set as well as remarks about some directorial decisions. For example, he relates why he so frequently showed those close-ups on the “XXX” tattoo. I still hate those shots, but at least I understand his motives.
While most of Cohen’s chat seems interesting, I do need to note that he fades a bit after the midpoint. He starts to spend too much time simply reiterating the story, and he also degenerates into too much praise for the film and the other participants.
Cohen’s tone appropriately becomes more subdued toward the end as well, when he notes the demise of a stunt man on the set. After that point, Cohen displays less fervor and zeal, but that makes sense given the tragic events in question. In any case, Cohen always seems to provide good commentaries, and this one doesn’t offer a notable exception to that rule.
After this we move to a slew of video extras. The most extensive, xXx: A Filmmaker’s Diary spans two parts: “US/Pre-Production” and “Prague/Post-Production”. Taken together, the pair run a total of 40 minutes, 53 seconds, and we find credited contributions from director Rob Cohen, actors Vin Diesel, Asia Argento and Michael Roof, producer Neal H. Moritz, writer Rich Wilkes, professional skateboarder Tony Hawk, executive producer Arne Schmidt, songwriter/music producer Glen Ballard, singer Gavin Rossdale, and production designer Gavin Bocquet. Others speak from the set as well, but we don’t learn their names.
The majority of the program provides shots from the set along with a little narration from the director. At the start, Cohen tells us that he enlisted Todd Grossman to videotape all 82 days of the production, and “Diary” features highlights of the process.
However, don’t expect a real documentary. We get a smidgen of information about topics like casting, the script, music and production design, but we mostly see images of the stunts and effects. Almost all of the “US/Pre-Production” half deals with stunts, and much of “Prague/Post-Production” follows suit.
The documentation of the production offers some interesting material, but the program remains pretty superficial, and the incessant music occasionally becomes annoying. While “Diary” features some good material, it seems like a moderate disappointment as a documentary.
Next we get a collection of featurettes. Building Speed: The Vehicles of xXx runs six minutes, 55 seconds and involves production designer Gavin Bocquet, art director Bradford Ricker, actor Michael Roof, and concept artist Harold Belker. The program illustrates a number of elements rated to the movie’s cars, with a particular emphasis on the GTO. The featurette lacks much depth, but it zips through design and construction issues pretty well and seems reasonably informative.
In a similar vein, Designing the World of xXx takes 14 minutes, 35 seconds as it assesses production design. We get remarks from Gavin Bocquet, Bradford Ricker, actor Vin Diesel, supervising art director Jonathan Lee, and director Rob Cohen. They discuss sets, locations, general design issues, and props/weapons/gadgets in this brisk but useful documentary. We get some nice images of the plans behind some of these and receive a good look at the considerations that went into the film.
A less useful program, Diesel Powered talks about its star. The six-minute, 50-second featurette includes statements from director Cohen, actors Asia Argento, Samuel L. Jackson, and Vin Diesel, producer Neal H. Moritz, weapons trainer Dave Kennedy, writer Rich Wilkes, and stunt coordinator Lance Gilbert.
Though some of the behind the scenes shots seem intriguing and we learn a little about the actor’s training, mostly this piece just tells us how great Diesel is. Puffy and unsatisfying, “Powered” includes little useful material.
Visual Effects How-To’s includes three different short clips that show effects deconstructions; we watch the various stages of those sequences. The bits last between 37 seconds and one minute, 18 seconds for a total of three minutes, four seconds of footage.
We’ve seen these kinds of pieces in the past, but this section seems fairly interesting and well done. One can watch the clips with or without commentary from visual effects supervisor Joel Hynek, who offers a dry but fairly useful discussion of the elements.
After this we get a collection of 10 Deleted Scenes. These provide a total of 15 minutes, 51 seconds of footage.
Some provide totally unused segments, while others consist of extended pieces or alternate clips. None of it seems terribly interesting, and some of the shots are simply embarrassing, like the terrible scene in which Xander chats with a teen about video games.
One can check out the scenes with or without commentary from director Cohen. He succinctly relates the reasons for the deletions and adds to our understanding of the editorial process.
New to the Blu-ray, Origins of a Renegade runs six minutes, 27 seconds and offers notes from Diesel and actors Michael Bisping, Nina Dobrev, Toni Collette, and Ruby Rose. Intended to promote the 2017 sequel, “Origins” mainly consists of Diesel’s reflections on the first movie. It’s a fluffy piece without much substance.
After this we get Agent Shavers’ Gadget Presentation. This three-minute, 55-second clip presents Roof as he leads us through a comedic look at the movie’s devices. Roof’s attempts at humor don’t work, but we do get a mildly interesting close-up glimpse of the different elements.
The End Credit Sequence: Raw and Uncut lasts three minutes, 34 seconds. All this offers is the same end sequence but without the text. I compared the two and saw no other differences, so don’t expect any lurid content here.
The 14-minute, 32-second Starz! On the Set presents a standard promotional show. It includes shots from the set, movie clips, and soundbites from Cohen, producer Neal H. Moritz, military advisor Dave Kennedy, executive producer Arne Schmidt, and actors Vin Diesel, Michael Roof, Samuel L. Jackson, Asia Argento, and Martin Csokas.
They tell us about the story, the characters, the cast and their training, weapons and gadgets, and some stunt sequences. As usual for this sort of program, insight remains minimal. Instead, it mostly just hypes the flick, which makes it mostly expendable. Outside of a couple good notes like Jackson’s choice to make his character scarred, you’ll learn little from all the happy talk in “Starz”.
We find Storyboard Comparisons for two scenes. These present “Avalanche Scene” (five minutes, 37 seconds) and “Drug Farm” (5:08). They use the traditional splitscreen format with the boards on top and the movie on the bottom. I don’t think they’re special, but they’re fine for what they attempt.
In addition to the film’s trailer, two music videos round out the set. The first comes for Gavin Rossdale’s “Adrenalin”.
A tepid rocker that sounds just like all his old work with the band Bush, the video offers the usual combination of lip-synch performance and movie clips. It’s very bland. I felt quite surprised to learn that Rob Cohen directed “Adrenaline” – keep your day job!
A second music video comes for Hatebreed’s “I Will Be Heard”. This mixes shots of the band on stage with movie snippets. The song’s not just bad - it’s hilariously bad, as it sounds like a parody of every shout-metal song ever recorded. The video’s just dull, though it’s a bit amusing as we watch the silly aggressiveness of band and audience members alike.
While the 2017 Blu-ray offers a lot of extras, it still leaves the 2005 Director’s Cut off of Blu-ray. Unsurprisingly, it also loses a short film called “The Death of Xander”. An awful, cynical effort, I don’t mind its absence, but it’d be nice to get the longer version of the film on BD.
In its attempts to create a 21st century secret agent, xXx just falls flat and comes across like a lame rehash of better films. A loud and obnoxious affair, the flick tries way too hard to floor us with its “extreme” action, but it does little more than seem inane and pointlessly flashy. The Blu-ray provides generally good picture along with excellent audio and a long list of bonus materials. Though the movie flops, this becomes a nice Blu-ray release.
To rate this film, visit the DVD review of xXx
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