Reel Critics
Craig Von Freymann
“Bad Company” is a serviceable spy movie that provides a vehicle for
Chris Rock to be Chris Rock. Unfortunately, it could have been a much
better movie without the spy stuff. Let Chris Rock be Chris Rock all the
time, forget the high tech, the intrigue, the saving the world. Let Rock
make jokes and goof on people. He’s much better at that than being James
Bond. This is no knock on Rock, just a simple fact. He’s not Sean
Connery. He’s not even Roger Moore.
The movie opens with beautiful, atmospheric shots of Prague and
smoke-filled back rooms, which only international spies inhabit. We are
introduced to Kevin Pope (Rock), suave CIA agent posing undercover as
international antiques dealer Michael Turner. In addition to buying and
selling art, Michael is negotiating the purchase of a suitcase nuke from
an evil former Soviet colonel. Everything about the scene is right except
for Rock. He just is not believable as the straight-laced CIA agent. He
is so not right; he is killed shortly thereafter setting up the standard
fish out of water Hollywood summer blockbuster. Low and behold, Michael
has an identical twin brother living in New Jersey.
The set up is straight out of “Twins”: twin brothers separated at
birth, one with every opportunity and break, the other one with nothing
but the love of his foster mother. Now the world’s only hope is for the
wise old agent Oakes (Anthony Hopkins) to recruit and train the street
hustling Rock to impersonate the twin he never knew he had.
This is why I had a real problem with the movie. The introduction to
the new Rock character, Jake Hayes, is too good. He is a slick street
hustler getting by scalping concert tickets and hustling chess in the
park. Jake loves his life and wants nothing more to make a buck and tell
a joke. His beautiful girlfriend Julie (Kerry Washington) wants nothing
more than for Jake to grow up and make an honest living. Tired of waiting
for him to get his life together, Julie accepts a job across the country
in Seattle. Julie promptly dumps Jake setting up a great bit with Jake,
as a club DJ, playing nothing but breakup music at the club. It’s simple
and funny. The look on his face and club goers is priceless. Without any
effort, Rock pops off one-liners and has the audience rolling.
But the movie does not stay with this and soon enough we see Jake in
the all-too predictable training montage.
The European action scenes are serviceable if not all too familiar. If
you’ve seen “Ronan” you’ve seen the best parts of “Bad Company.” There
are car chases, gunfights, physical stunts and beautiful locations. The
villains, both Russians and Chechens, are believable and entertaining. It
turns out that the Chechens want the bomb and will do anything to
eliminate their competition. Rock must dodge and fast-talk his way out of
one scrap after another. Rock does a good job with the physical work of
the movie and adds a flash of style into otherwise routine action scenes.
There are cliffhangers, twists and turns. The action is well paced and
keeps the audience involved.
* CRAIG VON FREYMANN, 33, Is an avid surfer who enjoys the quality of
life and numerous leisure activities the city offers.
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