

アルティメット・コマンドー CIA VS デルタフォース
"「誘拐犯(2000)」の人気男優R・フィリップが、謎の誘拐犯一味と対決するデルタフォースの隊員に扮したハードアクション。C・ヴァン・ディーン、W・カットら共演。"
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米陸軍特殊部隊(デルタフォース)のヴィックが大学生の息子ショーンを寮へ迎えに行くと、運転手と名乗る男をリーダーとする謎の武装集団は、ショーンの友人である最高裁判事の娘エリンを誘拐しようと寮を襲撃。ヴィック、ショーン、エリンは寮に立てこもるが、携帯電話の電波を遮断されてしまい、外部に救援を求められない。一方、武装集団の黒幕である政治家は、エリンを殺されたくなければ銃規制に反対しろと判事を脅迫し……。
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This cheap, bizarre action flick might have benefited from dropping its main heroic character. Major Vic Davis (Ryan Phillippe) goes to a college campus to pick up his estranged, theater major son Shawn (Jack Griffo) for some bonding time over Christmas break. Shawn is making goo-goo eyes with Erin (a great Lexi Simonsen), the daughter of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Walton (a too stiff Randy Charach). The Court is deciding a gun control issue, hence the terrible title, and some powers-that-be send smooth domestic terrorist "Driver" (Casper Van Dien) and his crew to kidnap Erin and sway the justice's decision. The film then takes the "Die Hard" route as Davis and his charge fight the baddies. I don't know what Phillippe, Van Dien, and McNamara are taking to appear ageless, but I'd like a prescription, please. Phillippe and Griffo appear to be the same age. This is a tried-and-true formula, but the film is so outlandish and muddled, it's like watching a trainwreck. Most of the gun shots are obvious powder squibs, you know it's Christmas because of the wreath nailed to the wall in the elevator and the harsh green and red light gels, and the film feels at least half an hour longer than it is. The politics are murky, you don't know what side of the gun control debate its on, plus they seem to be getting basic American jurisprudence wrong (the Supreme Court just can't overthrow a Constitutional amendment). This wouldn't be a big deal, but the title is the amendment they are supporting but not supporting. I liked the Shawn/Erin dynamic more, it would have been interesting if Davis was dropped from the action altogether, taking a secondary role either through his son's memories (he taught Shawn how to defend himself) or communicating with him from the outside. If the villains had taken a break from swigging whiskey during dialogue scenes, they might have sobered up enough to make their conspiracy work. The film sets up a sequel no one seems to be very interested in pursuing; would that be "The 3rd," where housing military soldiers in civilian homes in a time of war takes center stage? Phillippe co-produced too, maybe trying to jump start his own action franchise. There's a likable cast here, but not enough meat on the bone to generate a series from the material. No seconds, I'm full. Contains physical violence, gun violence, some gore, profanity, alcohol use























