Home
about Stephen Hunt's SFcrowsnest.com
Search:
EUROPE'S MOST VISITED SF/F WEB SITE
     

Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle

The concept of throwaway entertainment comes in all forms, shapes and sizes. And as everybody and their grandmother already knows, an exceedingly high dosage of boisterous brain-dead eye candy is what usually satisfies the majority of giddy moviegoers during the summertime blues.


Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle (2003) Columbia Pictures
1 hr. 51 mins.
Starring: Drew Barrymore, Cameron Diaz, Lucy Liu, Bernie Mac, Demi Moore, Crispin Glover, Justin Theroux, Robert Patrick, Shia LaBeouf

The concept of throwaway entertainment comes in all forms, shapes and sizes. And as everybody and their grandmother already knows, an exceedingly dosage of boisterous brain-dead eye candy is what usually satisfies the majority of giddy moviegoers during the summertime blues.

Well, the empty-headed surge of the ridiculously overcharged Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle will probably meet the challenge for those whose fetishes includes a loud and overactive jigglefest that’s utterly exhausting as it is needlessly aimless.

Producer-star Drew Barrymore and her splashy director McG (a.k.a. Joseph McGinty Nichol) have come together once again to toss into our laps the continued mindless mayhem that made their previous 2000 box office actioner the $250 million dollar sensation the destined hit that it became.

Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle

Whereas the original film was somewhat savvy in its presentation of curvy and youngish galpals making a mockery out of the action-packed genre in wink-wink fashion while delivering their own spin of raucous feminist fury, Full Throttle is merely an act of sheer overkill.

Methodically, it looks to blatantly bang the audience over the head with an endless array of rapid and risky action sequences with no particular rhyme or reason, a stream of tiresome suggestive jokes and double entendre dialogue only a horny high schooler can fully appreciate, and the insistence of pumping up the volume of its relentlessly brash youth-oriented soundtrack to lend some roguish snap to this pointless popcorn pleaser.

Of course Angels moviemaker McG comes from the fast-paced world of music videos and naturally Barrymore wanted to use his expertise to arm her frivolous flick with some stylistically funky and moody tunes to give Full Throttle its ribald personality.

There’s no doubt that this installment of Charlie’s Angels was gunning for a more appetizing pace of gusto and glitz. Still, it’s too bad that this disjointed T & A session didn’t find time to incorporate a coherent script that could have made this jumpy joyride more palatable in its celebrated outrageousness.

Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle and its cinematic predecessor are based on the tremendously popular late seventies ABC-TV private detective series that made household names out of original halo honeys Jaclyn Smith, Farrah Fawcett-Majors and Kate Jackson. But now the millennium-made movie audiences know the butt-kicking beauties as Natalie Cook (Cameron Diaz), Dylan Sanders (Drew Barrymore) and Alex Munday (Lucy Liu).

The crime-fighting cuties are back and accompanied by an assortment of gimmick-inspired cameos to go along with the exaggerated chaos that makes up their so-called intriguing adventures. Anyway, the tasty-looking trio is still in the employ of top PI Charles Townsend (voiced by veteran actor John Forsythe) who assigns his charges the latest cases over the now-famous trademark speakerphone.

Joining the Angels in the latest caper is another Bosley as played by Emmy-nominated comic actor Bernie Mac. The original Bosley (played by Bill Murray in the first film) has moved on so his smooth as silk adoptive "brother" is there to pick up the pieces and assist the sexy sleuths as needed.

Full Throttle finds the Angels contemplating the transition of their personal livelihood as it threatens to invade their professional obligations. For instance, Natalie has made a decision to move in with her beloved beau Pete (Luke Wilson). In the meanwhile, Dylan is skeptical about Natalie’s closeness with Pete to the point that she may consider leaving altogether thus breaking up their threesome core that have become so instrumental in their "sisters in peril" routine.

This, of course, is designed as an inside chuckle since Dylan’s concern echoes the nostalgic anxiety when TV Angels Fawcett-Majors and Jackson decided to fly the coop for greener pastures. The thought of new blood mixing in with the impeccable chemistry that has been already established has Dylan hitting the sauce to drown her worries.

There to console a distraught Dylan is former Angel Kelly Garrett (Jaclyn Smith reprising her noted television CA persona). As for Alex, her hands are tied up when her father (played by John Cleese) arrives on the scene and is under the assumption that his daughter does prostitution for a living.

It’s a matter of time before the film milks this manufactured misunderstanding and plays it for the tiresome chuckle that is ad nauseam to boot. Plus, Alex has her romantic ambivalence as she insists on playing footsies with her dreamy but doltish boytoy (Matt LeBlanc from TV’s Friends).

The convoluted plot, if it isn’t being force fed to the audience in heavy-handed droves, finds the Angels trying to apprehend a pair of rings that when joined together can ominously expose all the names listed within the federal witness protection program.

As absurd as that sounds, the storyline becomes juicier when perturbed ex Angel Madison Lee (Demi Moore) flirts with the dark side and schemes to snatch the very same revealing rings that our hottie heroines are trying to retrieve as well. You see the shapely fortysomething Madison harbors a nasty grudge against her former boss Charlie and her bad disposition only fuels her contempt for striking back at everything she once valued.

Moore’s Madison comes off as a feisty butch whose angry Grrrl tendencies tries to heighten the sympathetic vibes we feel for our conformist men-craving honey-bunny crimebusters Natalie, Dylan and Alex. One has to admit that Moore’s Madison is a colorful buffed up renegade and loosely is a flippant slap in the face at the militant stance of feminism in its grandest scathing.

In addition to the presence of Moore’s Madison as a resentful Angel who gladly clipped her own wings rather than toil faithfully for "the unappreciative Man", the movie parades out other villains that range from either being too outlandish to stomach to simply being yet another unnecessary delusional distraction in a silly-minded stew that already includes too many arbitrary ingredients.

Seamus O’Grady (Justin Theroux) is the prototypical one-dimensional Irish mobster out for revenge and one-time lover of Dylan who had no choice but to help imprison him. Robert Patrick (the resilient morphing villain from Terminator II) plays duplicitous Justice Department official Ray Carter. And Crispin Glover (Willard) returns as the Thin Man that contributes to his notoriously thin role.

For all the robust and cheeky material that’s packed into this frolicking display, Full Throttle ironically comes off as rather flimsy. Sure, the movie is a barrage of boisterous vignettes energized by nonsensical yet free-spirited action sequences that include an awestruck motocross stunt and other eye-opening high-wire scenes that add to the merriment of the madness. And the showy fight scenes and disguise demonstrations are meant to toast the cheesy smirk of its intentional put upon platitudes.

Yet with all the frenetic flourishes that McG desperately pours into this busty buddy-action farce, Full Throttle feels like an elaborate yesteryear Charlie’s Angels television rerun overloaded with campy anecdotal elements waiting for the masses to approve of its pseudo-spunky overdrive.

Whether having Diaz, Barrymore and Liu shaking their physical goodies all over the place in some gaudy musical show or allowing them to wreak havoc to the hysterical visual landscape that McG captures their exploits in, Full Throttle is just another excuse to deliver another random hyperactive fleshy fable and pass it off as a mainstream mega-snack.

From a technical standpoint, Full Throttle lives up to its name as the movie languishes so convincingly in its overly saturated opulence. The movie also has a merry old time referencing other treasured cinema and television shows instead of concentrating on its own erratic existence. The lead starlets Diaz, Barrymore and Liu all seem to be having fun in this cavorting action-oriented caper.

It’s too bad that they focus more on prancing about as divisive dolls as opposed to instilling this raunchy romp with some semblance of grounded characterization. Mac is inherently hilarious as the Angels/Charlie’s reliable Man Friday but this jittery expose doesn’t give him much to do in showcasing his comical craftiness. Regrettably, Mac is reduced to playing a chaperone for a privileged teenaged tyke (Shia LeBeouf from Holes) in a lingering subplot.

When the movie isn’t going through the usual motions of having the Angels play dress up by passing them off as strippers, nuns, surfers, hot dog vendors or cabaret dancers then the proceedings become more tedious with the insistence of brief celebrity appearances that include the likes of Bruce Willis, the Olsen Twins, Pink, Carrie Fisher, Robert Forster, Eric Bogosian, etc. Heck, even Cannonball Run was more subtle and clever in its usage of camera-hogging participants than what Full Throttle lamely pulls off here.

Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle is nothing but jolting and jazz-up junk food and it certainly knows it. Every frame of this over-hyped flick is played to the hilt and it doesn’t bother apologize for its frothy foolishness. In a way, that’s something to be admired. But in an age where this kind of intentionally laughable guilty pleasure is bound to draw attention and big bucks, McG’s noisy narrative never manages to uplift the fluff so that it at least has some descriptive and stimulating nuttiness that’s effortlessly amusing.

Plain and simple, this pulsating patchwork of bouncing boobs and other kinetic kitschy inclinations may seem like a sure fire way to start your eventful summer sizzling at the movies.

However, it would be a grave mistake to interpret Barrymore’s vanity piece as sizzle without noting the "reel" deal of it being just another excitable and intrusive fizzle. Nevertheless, there will be those who’ll blindly appreciate the "cleavage carnage" mantra in its glorious hormonal entirety.

Hmmm…so much for the heavenly high jinks that Charlie and his delicious diva-minded Angels bring to the forefront, huh?

Frank Ochieng

Did you like Angels II? Post Here.


Hobbits FREE SF MAGAZINE
Sign up for the Crowsnest SF e-magazine - full of funny reports and gossip. Be the first to find out about hot science fiction happenings & news!
        

more on the magazine...

CHAT ABOUT THIS STORY

NEWS ARCHIVE

 

OTHER CONTENT - August 2003

Oasis Star Trek

NEW. Add this news to your own web site for free!

28 Days Later: Frank's Take
Unconventional filmmaker Danny Boyle has the inherent knack for stomach-turning entertainment that's outright disturbing yet oddly poetic and polished in its gruesome suspended state of mind.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle
The concept of throwaway entertainment comes in all forms, shapes and sizes. And as everybody and their grandmother already knows, an exceedingly high dosage of boisterous brain-dead eye candy is what usually satisfies the majority of giddy moviegoers during the summertime blues.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Conjose Mails Membership Reimbursements
ConJose, the 2002 World Science Fiction Convention, issued reimbursements to qualified volunteers, staff, committee, and program participants beginning in late May 2003.
(CONVENTIONS)

Hewitt (NJ) Author's New Novel To Appear As Online Serial
With about 60 titles already published on both sides of the Atlantic, award-winning NJ author John Grant thought he'd seen every way there was of his books being published ... but he was wrong!
(NEWS)

Jon Courtenay Grimwood Interview
Jon Courtenay Grimwood belongs to the special group of SFF novelists who write compelling Science Fiction that keeps the reader's interest without employing the short cuts of cliché, formulae or fantasy. Jane Palmer chats with one of the rapidly rising stars of Brit-Lit SF.
(INTERVIEWS)

Touched by a Tentacle
Scottish SF author Ken MacLeod comes across an intriguing article on the influence of right-wing think tanks, and via that, the even more revelatory Cursor's Media Transparency, which tells you who's paying which pipers (and why they all play the same tune).
(COMMENT)

The Subtracted Dimensions of Lisa Snellings
The hugely admired kinetic 3D creations of fantasy sculptor Lisa Snellings are a constant source of fascination to those lucky enough to own them, or to visit the people who do. A new development - Snellings-as-fantasy-illustrator - has come about through the creation of an anthology of original stories.
(INTERVIEWS)

July 2003 Offworld Report
SFF imprint Earthlight is axed, John Jarrold angrily speaks out on this, Richard E Grant becomes the new Dr Who, why Clarion matters, Eric Van Lustbader is interviewed, and a fab review of POD-based SFF fiction (hint, it's really, really bad).
(NEWS)

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines: Frank's Take
This juiced-up futuristic fable is delightfully on maximum overdrive and Arnold S. does what he does best ... deliver his brand of robotic ribaldry with the precision of an extremely well-oiled machine.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Bounty (Star Trek Enterprise)
While Archer is taken prisoner by a bounty hunter, T'Pol is infected by a pathogen which unleashes her mating urges. Tim finds an episode which is one of the season's worst: appallingly bad in fact.
(TV REVIEWS)

Cogenitor (Star Trek Enterprise)
A first contact situation leads Trip to get overly involved with the life and rights of a new species. There's a few plot conveniences, but this proves fairly meaty stuff.
(TV REVIEWS)

First Flight (Star Trek Enterprise)
Archer gets word than an old colleague has died, prompting him to tell T'Pol about the early days of warp test flights. Goofy in spots, but fairly charming overall says our Tim.
(TV REVIEWS)

Regeneration (Star Trek Enterprise)
The discovery of a crashed ship in the Arctic leads to humanity's first ever encounter with the Borg. Mostly a collection of horror-movie cliches. Good moments, but that's all.
(TV REVIEWS)

The Breach (Star Trek Enterprise)
While Trip, Reed, and Mayweather must travel through treacherous caves in order to find some lost Denobulans, Phlox finds himself facing a patient with a long-standing grudge against Phlox's own race. The character material is good, the jeopardy sub-plot is not so great though
(TV REVIEWS)

The Expanse (Star Trek Enterprise)
In the season finale, an attack on Earth by a new alien race brings a change of mission for the Enterprise. Tim discovers lots of setup, but not a lot of payoff.
(TV REVIEWS)

Martian Opposition
Rod ponders the Red Planet's fascination for writers of science fiction and fantasy and muses over the host of space probes which will shortly be descending there from America, Europe and Japan.
(ARTICLES)

Kevin J. Anderson: An Impolite Interview
Kevin J. Anderson on why he can't get enough of sprawling, multiple storyline books, on making characters grow, live and die, and why science fiction is the only genre with the entire universe as its canvas.
(INTERVIEWS)

The Hulk: Frank's Take
In revered filmmaker Ang Lee’s darkly jolting action-adventure The Hulk, the perversely spry comic-book film adaptation continues on as a booming genre flick.
(FILM REVIEWS)

28 Days Later: Mark's Take
A modestly budgeted science fiction film has society being destroyed by a virus that turns people into violent killers. While some of the ideas and some of the story seem borrowed from The Day Of The Triffids, the film itself seems freshly nightmarish.
(FILM REVIEWS)

The Hulk: Mark's Take
Ambitious but ultimately dissatisfying film version of the Marvel comic. A man periodically turns into a not-so-jolly green giant. Ang Lee does the adaptation with ill-calculated sensibility and not much sense.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl (Mark's Take)
This is almost certainly the most exciting pirate film ever made. This fast-paced confection of an adventure has wit, a good story and imaginative visuals. Johnny Depp gives what is probably his best performance as a grubby yet stylish pirate captain.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machine (Mark's Take)
The new Terminator film has fewer ideas to slow the action. The film is in more ways than one just a machine demolition derby. The future sends back what is supposed to be the most advanced Terminator robot of the series but budget constraints and poor writing make it less intelligent and less capable than its predecessor was.
(FILM REVIEWS)

The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Mark's Take
An interesting premise from a graphic novel makes about half an hour of interesting story, mostly for the introduction of the characters. But the film needed a good plot to make it more than just a comic book origin story. This one seems to have a plot that was patched together as it went along. The film has a nice look, but the viewer is never intrigued by the villain or his machinations.
(FILM REVIEWS)


CHAT ABOUT THIS STORY

Advertise Here (More ...)

 

 
HTML Text AOL
nest home | search engine | site directory | shop | library | tools | about us |

... www.sfcrowsnest.com © 2001 C
Want a free SF/F Zine? Then send an e-mail to: hologramtales-subscribe@topica.com