Rollerball (2002 film)
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| Rollerball | |
|---|---|
promotional poster | |
| Directed by | John McTiernan |
| Produced by | John McTiernan Charles Roven Beau St. Clair |
| Screenplay by | Larry Ferguson John Pogue |
| Based on | short story Roller Ball Murder by William Harrison 1975 screenplay Rollerball by William Harrison |
| Starring | Chris Klein Jean Reno LL Cool J Rebecca Romijn Naveen Andrews |
| Music by | Éric Serra |
| Cinematography | Steve Mason |
| Editing by | Robert K. Lambert John Wright |
| Studio | Mosaic Media Group Atlas Entertainment Toho-Towa Yorktown Productions Helkon Media KG |
| Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| Release date(s) |
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| Running time | 98 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $70 million |
| Box office | $25,852,764 |
Rollerball is a 2002 remake of the 1975 science-fiction film of the same name. This updated version stars Chris Klein, Jean Reno, LL Cool J, Rebecca Romijn, and Naveen Andrews. It was directed by John McTiernan and has a much greater concentration on action with more muted social and political overtones. Unlike the first film, it takes place in the present rather than a seemingly dystopian future.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
It is the year 2005. The new sport of Rollerball is hugely popular in Central Asia, Russia, China, Mongolia, and Turkey.
Marcus Ridley (LL Cool J) invites NHL hopeful Jonathan Cross (Chris Klein) to join him playing for the Zhambel Horsemen in Kazakhstan. The highly paid Marcus and Jonathan are teamed with low-paid locals, who are often severely injured in the game, which is an extraordinarily violent extension of roller derby involving motorcycles, a metal ball, and many trappings of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE).
Soon the team's star and the darling of promoter Alexi Petrovich (Jean Reno), Jonathan, is thrilled by the high-octane sport, the hype, the sports cars, and female team mate Aurora (Rebecca Romijn). But gradually Jonathan discovers that the cynical Alexi and his opportunistic rat Sanjay (Naveen Andrews) will go to any lengths to manipulate the game in order to provide an ever more gory spectacle and improve the game's popularity.
[edit] Cast
- Chris Klein as Jonathan Cross
- Jean Reno as Alexi Petrovich
- LL Cool J as Marcus Ridley
- Rebecca Romijn as Aurora "the Black Widow"
- Naveen Andrews as Sanjay
- Mike Dopud as Michael "the Assassin"
- Kata Dobó as Katya Dobolakova
- Lucia Rijker as Lucia Ryjker
- Oleg Taktarov as Oleg Denekin
- Paul Heyman as Sports Announcer
- Janet Wright as Coach Olga
The film features cameo appearances by Pink, Slipknot, Carroll Shelby, and Shane McMahon. The former's appearance was digitally added after filming their performance in front of green screen.
[edit] Soundtrack
The score was released, but the soundtrack was not.
- "Boom" – P.O.D.
- "Told You So" – Drowning Pool
- "Ride" – Beautiful Creatures
- "Millionaire" – Rappagariya
- "I Am Hated" – Slipknot
- "Body Go" – Hardknox
- "Feel So Numb" – Rob Zombie
- "Keep Away" – Godsmack
- "Insane in the Brain" - Sen Dog
- "Flashpoint" - Fear Factory
- "When I Come Around" - Green Day
- "Crawling in the Dark" - Hoobastank
- "Time To Play" - Pillar
- "Never Gonna Stop (The Red Red Kroovy)" - Rob Zombie
[edit] Reception
Rollerball was heavily panned by critics. Time Out's Trevor Johnson described it as "a checklist shaped by a 15-year-old mallrat: thrashing metal track, skateboards, motorbikes, cracked heads and Rebecca Romijn with her top off", while Chicago Sun-Times reviewer Roger Ebert called it "an incoherent mess, a jumble of footage in search of plot, meaning, rhythm and sense".
The film's lead, Chris Klein, was also a subject of criticism, being referred to as a bland hero.
Rotten Tomatoes ranked the film 28th in the 100 worst reviewed films of the 2000s, with a rating of 3%.
The film was a box-office flop, earning a worldwide total of $26 million compared to a production budget of $70 million.[1] Romijn was nominated for a Razzie Award as Worst Supporting Actress.
The creator of Rollerball, science fiction author William Harrison had the following to say about the film: "I've never watched the 2002 incarnation of Rollerball, and have no interest in it."[2]
[edit] References
- ^ "Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=rollerball.htm. Retrieved 2011-08-24.
- ^ "Video DeathRay". Videodeathray.podbean.com. http://videodeathray.podbean.com/2011/02/26/video-deathray-ep-31-rollerball-guest-kevin-maher/. Retrieved 2011-08-24.
[edit] External links
- Rollerball at the Internet Movie Database
- Rollerball at AllRovi
- Rollerball at Rotten Tomatoes
- Rollerball at Box Office Mojo
- Review of Rollerball (2002) on the Video DeathRay podcast
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- 2002 films
- English-language films
- American films
- 2000s action films
- 2000s science fiction films
- Film remakes
- Films directed by John McTiernan
- Films set in 2005
- Films shot anamorphically
- Films shot in Wyoming
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- Roller derby films
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