I see a lot of movies. It's my hobby and in many instances my main vice. If it weren't for the inconveniences of real life I would easily spend 12+ hours a day watching them. Some people work out, some people smoke crystal meth in their trailer while listening to Kenny Chesney and others buy shoes. I watch movies. Most of the time I'll see a movie and I'll rate it anywhere from 2 1/2 to 4 out of 5 stars. I can find something about practically any movie I see that I like. Good direction, snappy dialogue, beautiful cinematography, great characters, a clever script, whatever.
This portal into film hell was the 2002 anti-gem, Ballistic-Ecks vs. Sever. I always knew on a gut level this movie was going to be bad. The big question was if it was going to be Plan 9 From Outer Space bad or Smiley Face bad. I was expecting some dick-swinging, testosterone-fueled actionfest void of substance and full of style. Not great style but style nonetheless.
Antonio Banderas plays a sad sack yet supposed badass federal(e) agent sent to find the kidnapped son of the bad guy from Payback. Banderas acts forlorn throughout most of the movie and acts by running his hand through his hair and not dyeing his gray 5 O'clock shadow. His foil (and later partner...!) is the kidnapper, played by Lucy Liu. Now granted, she's reasonably foxy but her character here is always clothed and makes numerous explosions happen while showing no emotion whatsoever. And this is all well and good if she's playing a robot. But since she's not it's kind of lame.
Ballistic tries to pepper the mindless action with drama. Bad drama. Banderas' character apparently saw his wife blown up and for reasons I still haven't been able to figure out (very much like the scene where Banderas is arrested for the shooting of his friend. Liu did it and there were about 367 witnesses to back up Banderas' innocence) she married the Payback dick who changed his identity for reasons I wasn't able to figure out. Oh, and that kidnapped... kid from earlier is supposed to be Payback's son with Banderas' wife. (I know I'm all over the place here, but stay with me. I'm trying here...) But it turns out Banderas knocked her up before the whole explosion. It's his kid!
Which brings me to some lapses in logic. We've got Antonio Banderas, who is Spanish. And the woman who plays his wife, Talisa Soto is Puerrrrto Rrrrrrican. She was the Bond girl in License To Kill that didn't wind up marrying Richard Gere if you're not sure who I'm talking about. And in the movie this is their kid:
And the McGuffin* of Ballistic is a nanobot meant for assassinations of world leaders, elected officials, etc. Payback smuggled it in the kid from Europe and somehow Lucy Liu got it out of him with a gun she stole off of the set of Episode One and magically got it into Payback. Oh, and that's how she kills him at the end and gets her revenge for her murdered family.
And for the finale there literally about 2 dozen explosions which seem to serve no purpose aside from being what I'm sure Kaos would call awesome. One of which catches Banderas in the face so badly to the point where you actually think it kills him. Instead some aluminum piping falls on him and after he kills a bad guy he manages to shake it off and run away. The ending is predictable enough, but for all the bad acting, all the horrific story points, the nonsensical action, the bad music and anything else that couldn't be much worse with this movie there was one thing that just completely did it in for me.
In one of the final scenes where the highest ranking law enforcement agency shows up to find out just what in thee hell happened there's a shot where a cop who looks like he should've retired during Clinton's first term is holding a gun on a dead body. As in a body that's not coming to, moving around a little bit or asking wha happened? Dead. Dead as Dillinger.
Despite my obvious, more obvious than some of the plot points of Ballistic at least, disdain for the movie, I'd still recommend it. I mean, everyone needs to laugh, right?
* in film, a plot device that has no specific meaning or purpose other than to advance the story; any situation that motivates the action of a film either artificially or substantively; also written MacGuffin. Thanks, dictionary.com!



You make a great case to waste 2 hours of my day getting frustrated as hell for watching something so, er, um, fabulous... but the gun held on a dead body did it for me. Almost.
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