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REVIEW: ‘Transporter 3' action, writing push definition of ‘ridiculous'
The director of the third "Transporter" movie has given himself the name Olivier Megaton. Too easy of a setup, you say? Very well. Make your own bomb joke.
It's enough to say that Megaton and producer Luc Besson finally drive the wheels off this action franchise with "Transporter 3." What once was a model for a pure action film, one as lean and ripped as Jason "Shirtless" Statham, its leading man, has been rendered pointlessly preposterous in the third installment.
As Frank, Statham, the ex-Olympic swimmer turned action hero, drives an Audi as if he had stolen it, chases cars with bikes and brawls with bad guys as his character transports another supermodel from Marseilles to Eastern Europe. The reluctant underworld driver, or "transporter," Frank is snatched by a generic American villain (Robert Knepper of "Prison Break") who attaches a bomb bracelet to his wrist and another to that of his kidnapped cargo, played by the sexy Natalya Rudakova. Move more than 75 feet from the car, you go "boom."
That distance is bent, contorted, twisted and stretched as bad guys try to break the deal, grab the girl, what have you. Martin foils them in brawls cleverly staged by Cory Yuen.
They usually begin with Martin telling them, "You don't want to do this." Off comes the shirt and down go the villains.
Pretty much everything about this is a joke, from the comical trash-Martin's-villa opening (how many villas has he lost in this series?) to the idiotic attempt to tie this mission to big polluters. The writing will make you wince, as the driver and his cargo try to stave off feeling doomed by talking about their favorite meals in banal descriptions.
The bad guys so closely supervise Martin's trip that you wonder, "Why not just take the girl themselves?"
But you can't leave the actual transporting out of the "Transporter" movies any more than you can take the bomb out of Olivier Megaton. Oops.
TRANSPORTER 3
Cast: Jason Statham, Natalya Rudakova
Director: Olivier Megaton
Playing at: Carmike, Chapel Hills, Cinemark, Hollywood, Tinseltown
Rated: PG-13 (for sequences of intense action and violence, some sexual content and drug material)
Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes
GRADE: D





