The Movie Insider
The Movie Insider
Movie Showtimes & Tickets
HomeLatest Movies News Headlines & RumorsBrowse All MoviesMovie ReviewsComing Soon to TheatersCelebrity IntereviewsMovie Photos, Spy Shots and Production StillsBox Office ResultsCelebrities What's on DVD?Screening Room
break
break


break

break
movie reviews
Ghost Rider (2007)

In my comic book days, I was drawn to Ghost Rider.  There was just something about a biker with a spiky leather jacket, chain, and a flaming skull with bike to match that to my adolescent mind was just, well, cool.  Admittedly, I can't recall reading any of the comics, but that image was just so striking, I might have subconsciously not wanted to ruin it.  Since comic movies are all the rage now, it was inevitable, and here's a big-screen adaptation of the hell's angel that is all kinds of silly.  Thankfully, Ghost Rider doesn't take the material of a hero born of Satan who fights evil purely at face value, but it does take its bloated mythology and tongue-in-cheek humor too seriously to qualify as camp.  What campy fun this could have been, too, but writer/director Mark Steven Johnson either misses the mark or feels some misguided need to do justice to the material.  Whatever the reason, Ghost Rider earns disbelief for its semi-serious tone when it could have gone for broke and allowed us to laugh at it.

As a young man, Johnny Blaze (Matt Long) worked the carnival circuit with his father (Brett Cullen) as a motorcycle stunt team.  The love of his young life Roxanne (Raquel Alessi) breaks the news that they won't be able to get married on account of her father's disapproval.  Johnny decides that they should run off together the next day, but he gets doubts after reading a letter from his father's doctor about the spread of cancer.  Late at night, a mysterious stranger (Peter Fonda) offers him a deal: He will make Johnny's father healthy in exchange for the kid's soul.  A contract is signed in blood, and the next day, his father's healthy again.  Problem is, the stranger is Mephistopheles and doesn't want the kid's dad to get in the way of their deal, so the elder Blaze dies in an accident.  I believe that's called irony.  Years later, Blaze is grown, played by Nicolas Cage, and a famous stunt rider.  When the devil's son Blackheart (Wes Bentley) comes to earth to take over, the devil has Blaze hold up on his end of the deal to stop his power-hungry spawn.  Bad timing, as Roxanne (Eva Mendes) has just come back into Blaze's life.

The movie opens with a prologue narrated by Sam Elliott, who later plays the caretaker of a cemetery where Blaze finds solace and guidance after his change, which tells the history of Ghost Riders past, primarily one who stole a list of souls from a town that figures heavily into Blackheart's plan.  Apparently, he's going to use the power of the souls to take over the world, but daddy isn't a fan, hence Blaze's transformation from a jellybean-eating, monkey-loving (don't ask) celebrity into a bounty hunter for the devil. 

Page 1 of 2:
-1-2
Review continued on next page »
REVIEWER RATING:


e-mail this page | printable format | give feedback | related rss
Home | News | Browse Movies | Reviews | Coming Soon | Now Playing | Interviews | Photos | Box Office | Celebrities | On DVD | Screening Room | MOST POPULAR | more...
Copyright ©1999–2008. All rights reserved.
Terms and Conditions  Privacy Statement