The Scorpion King

The Scorpion King

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The Scorpion King

Bernard Hill, Dwayne Johnson, Grant Heslov, Kelly Hu, Michael Clarke Duncan, Peter Facinelli, Rolf Moeller, Sherri Howard, Somaya Reece, Steven Brand

In the notorious city of Gomorrah, an evil ruler is determined to lay waste to all the nomadic peoples of the desert. The few remaining tribes, never natural allies, have to unite or perish. Knowing t...( read more  read more... )heir enemy relies on the visions of a sorcerer, they hire a skilled assassin, Mathayus to eliminate the visionary. After infiltrating the enemy camp, Mathayus discovers that the sorcerer is in fact a beautiful woman. Rather than eliminate her, he takes her deep into the desert badlands, knowing that the ruler's henchman will stop at nothing to rescue her and bring her back. Seriously wounded in the ensuing battle, Mathayus must find the strength to lead his scrappy band of allies back to Gomorrah for a final confrontation.

Id: 10910745

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Recent Reviews


  • September 9, 2008
    "Rivers of blood will never bring peace."


    Spin-off movies are risky endeavours. Following the enormous success of The Mummy and The Mummy Returns it was destiny that the studio would either develop another sequel or a spin-off. In 2002 it apparently see

    ...( read more)med more convenient to develop an adventure featuring an underused and underdeveloped character from The Mummy Returns. In this case, pro wrestler The Rock (whose real name is Dwayne Johnson) had about 5 minutes of genuine screen-time in the aforementioned The Mummy Returns, not counting the extra few minutes when he appeared as a poorly-rendered CGI creation of a hybrid between a scorpion and a man. The Scorpion King attempts to give The Rock's minor character a proper back-story in the form of a swords-and-sandals medieval flick akin to Conan the Barbarian.

    The initial worrying factor was that The Rock is a pro wrestler. In The Mummy Returns he really doesn't say anything at all and never showed much acting. This begged the question...could a wrestler carry a movie and display satisfactory acting skills?
    Still, in the lead-up to the film's release I had expected some decent results, especially with Stephen Sommers (the writer/director of the first two The Mummy flicks) among those involved with writing the screenplay. The Scorpion King falls into a very unsuccessful genre where swords, axes, bows and arrows are utilised to dispatch enemies. There certainly aren't very many decent flicks in this genre so far. Well...there still aren't. This is not a good movie by any stretch of the imagination.

    The story is set roughly ten years preceding the main character's appearance in The Mummy Returns. Already, there is a massive fault in the film's story. In The Mummy Returns he's a villain with plans for world domination. Here, we're supposed to cheer for him as the hero. Oops...
    Mathayus (The Rock) is among the last of the Akkadian warriors. These warriors are trained from birth as elite mercenaries who work for a hefty price. As fate would have it, he's hired to kill someone but finds himself in an elaborate set-up.
    The plot is trite, clichéd and boring. It wants to be a thrill-a-minute action ride, but it's not. It's lame! Furthermore, it's entirely forgettable with the inclusion of the pointless and irritating action scenes that are poorly shot and difficult to believe.

    The biggest flaw of the movie relates to the dreadfully clichéd script and below average actors. The characters in particular are clichéd beyond belief. There's the muscle-bound protagonist who exists to kill as many people as possible, the beautiful woman who spends half the time naked, the annoying sidekick who's supposed to be funny and witty, the big bad guy who sits on his throne and can carry out preposterous superhuman abilities (I mean, he can catch an arrow? Come on!) and of course a strong warrior to fight alongside the big muscle-bound hero. Probably the most disappointing facet of the characters is the poor way they've been written. The central bad guy, played by Steven Brand, never strikes fear or intimidation into the audience. He's a forgettable weakling and does not belong in a film such as this. Looking back at Conan the Barbarian, the main villain was played with sinister gusto by the capable James Earl Jones. Jones had a commanding voice and always seemed threatening. How I miss the days of the 80s.

    The Rock does everything he's supposed to do throughout the movie. He delivers corny lines rather well - better than Arnold Schwarzenegger did in his first few movies. But the pro wrestler isn't the problem: the problem lies in everything else the film has to offer. It appears that the script suffered from a dose of committee writing - that is, lots of people insisting their ideas get inserted. Kelly Hu's role is a prime example. One voice says that she must be naked most of the time, while another voice insists that nothing naughty is ever shown because they must get their PG-13 rating from the MPAA. Hu therefore emerges from the water with strategically placed long hair covering up the juicy bits.

    There's also the fact of the action. The script includes an abundance of pointless action to cover up for the lack of plot. Then the rating again comes into question. With the MPAA giving the film a PG-13 rating, it means more profitable run at the box office. We hear the gore, but don't see it. Once again I must compare this to Conan the Barbarian: in that film we cheer for the hero and love seeing the villains getting their just deserts as they are very violently offed. Let's face it - over-the-top violence is entertaining! In this case, though, The Scorpion King has no balls. It aims for money rather than quality. With the inclusion of more brutal battle violence the film would have at least been a guilty pleasure. Unfortunately, it can't even achieve that status. It's crap! Pure, genuine, bloodless crap with nothing redeeming!

    Another thing: if one looks at Conan the Barbarian it's more entertaining because there always seems to be a sense of gritty realism. The Scorpion King is embarrassingly low-brow because of how unbelievable it is! It defies the laws of physics, and of course must include slow motion fight moves. Like in the final battle when an arrow is shot at a man. We follow the arrow in ultra slow motion, then it collides with a man and he's thrown back several feet. How they hell can an arrow, weighing a little less than a kilo, knock a 90kg man off his feet?! And I have no idea how contemporary directors settle on the inaccurate conclusion that slo-mo fight scenes look cool. Maybe the teenagers enjoy savouring the pathetic concept, but in my opinion it's cheap and unnecessary. It completely takes you out of the movie. It reminds you that it's just a fluffy piece of celluloid. If one wants to see things in slow motion, use the option on your DVD player!

    All things considered, The Scorpion King wants to be in the league of the films that spawned it. The Mummy Returns is quite an awful movie, but at least it had an entertainment value. The Scorpion King has too many flaws. Everything is poorly done. Bad directing (director Chuck Russell was quite inexperienced), poor editing, over-the-top special effects, unbelievable plot points and a story riddled with endless clichés. It's so predictable! When it comes to the action genre, things usually are predictable. Be that as it may, the ride should be fun to take. The Scorpion King is not a fun ride to take at all! You'll be sneering instead of enjoying. It's so incredibly stupid!!! Worse yet, Kelly Hu's character of a sorceress appears to be a direct duplication of Jane Seymour's character in the James Bond film Live and Let Die. When filmmakers are taking inspirations from a spy series for a Conan the Barbarian facsimile, you know there's something horribly wrong here.

    If only the script and story were as strong as the film's title actor. Followed by The Scorpion King 2: Rise of a Warrior.
  • August 30, 2008
    A spin-off from The Mummy series delivers some action and beautiful sets but fails to become any good.

    In the Mummy Returns, the Scorpion King was portrayed as a world conquerer. In this film he's a charming good guy who's about to save the "world" from a tyrant. Odd, I'd say....( read more)

    The film is all about showing that The Rock has an on-screen charisma. Ok, he woun't fail his fans. The film is nothing else but a brainless action movie with cheesy one-liners and slow-motioned shots of the heroes kicking their opponents asses. Where's the violence, anyway? I guess Rock's fanbase is mostly 10-13 year old boys so they had to make it suitable for kids...

    It looks good, sounds good but isn't any good. Watch Conan instead.
  • August 4, 2008
    A struggling band of tribes hire a desert warrior of a thought extinct tribe to help rid them of a tyrant that is ruling their land with an iron fist. Seeking to kill a mystic priestess that is the source of the tyrant?s advantage and power, the warrior is betrayed by the son of ...( read more)the man that hired him, the warrior is taken prisoner and his brother is murdered. Seeking to avenge is brother?s death, the warrior escapes his death and flees to reform the rebel tribes to lead them to victory. Now with the priestess on his side, The Scorpion King rises from the ashes to lead his people to freedom.
    The Scorpion King is a fantastic entry spin off of The Mummy franchise. Sadly the sequel that Universal studios planned is straight to DVD and does not have The Rock in the starring role, usually a big mistake by any studio that chooses to venture down that path. The Rock does an admirable job in the lead. Nothing Spectacular, but gives the audience a taste that he can carry a film and show he is indeed the next action superstar of the film industry. The Scorpion King is a popcorn flick in the movies rawest form and does the job well. The Scorpion King is a great action movie for the family and receives four scorpion stings out of five for giving the audience a sharp sting of excitement.
  • August 2, 2008
    The Rock plays an assassin who is hired to kill a sorceress whose guidance aids the tyrant his people are attempting to overthrow. Conan The Barbarian meets The Arabian Nights in this spin off to Steven Sommers' Mummy franchise, The Rock showing a very similar screen presence to ...( read more)Arnie in his early days. This is basically purely formulaic popcorn film-making; the plot is entirely predictable and the usual catalogue of characters (brave lone warrior, sexy princess in distress, cowardly sidekick, streetwise kid, old eccentric, grudging ally) are all present and correct. But Dwayne's background as a pro-wrestler holds him in good stead for some energetic fights sequences, there's enough tongue in cheek humour to maintain the interest and it's cheerfully unpretentious. Completely forgettable but entertaining for the duration, and it's a little better than Sommers' own sequel The Mummy Returns.
  • July 30, 2008
    Mindless action packed prequel spin-off from 'The Mummy' series. Fairly pointless, but lots of fun. The sword and sandal setting is enjoyable and The Rock is a tremendously charismatic screen presence. The supporting cast is very average, but some of the effects are a pleasant su...( read more)rprise. So, if you can leave your brain at the door, there is plenty to enjoy, but the mire discerning viewer may feel a bit cheated. Lets face it, the Mummy series is far from rocket science anyway right?
  • November 6, 2009
    Chafa.. chafa chafa... pero bien entretenida! jajaja
  • November 3, 2009
    Non stop,rock-solid Action! Amen

    this kind of movie gotta huv it!
  • October 28, 2009
    very good one to watch.should see this movie.Excellent
  • October 27, 2009
    ok who know it was the Rock?
  • October 15, 2009
    what can i say Its the ROCK

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