Michael Scott
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Scorpion King: Book of Souls
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I’m a big sloppy fan of The Scorpion King with The Rock getting one of his main starring roles. It was goofy, stupid, and a complete revisionist historically speaking to the type of character that the Scorpion King was in the second The Mummy film with Brendan Frasier (even though he was mostly just a flashback and then CGI’d hilariously badly for the rest of his role). It’s fun and goofy, with The Rock proving why he would become the next big action king with his charisma and good looks. A sequel would not have been a bad thing in all reality, but a cheap DTV sequel/prequel that didn’t even star The Rock? Well, that’s not something any of us cared to watch (The Scorpion King 2 was abysmal). Somehow the DTV flick made enough money to warrant two more sequels starring Victor Webster (of Continuum and Mutant X fame), and still the series persisted. Scorpion King: Book of Souls is a deviation from the series a bit, as it brings in Don Michael Paul to direct the newest film.
Now Don Michael Paul is an interesting bird. He’s made most of his films as DTV sequels to other franchises (he made the last two Tremors films, as well as Jarhead 2, Sniper Legacy and the latest Death Race film). Interestingly enough, he also brings over Zach Mcgowan, who starred in his last film, Death Race 4: Beyond Anarchy, and does the exact same thing that the two of them did there. Bury a franchise. Scorpion King: Book of Souls saps the cheesy stupidity out of the previous two films and instead tries to make it dark and gritty and serious, something that pretty much is the final nail in the coffin of the franchise (at least we can only hope), as the series has kind of limped along on the hammy “wink at the camera” nature of the last couple of films. Zach sadly can’t act his way out of a paper bag, and the dialog is just as hammy as the previous two films, just with the characters taking themselves deadly serious.
Yeah yeah yeah. Pretty much a done deal. We know how this is going to end. Mathayus (Mcgowan) is going to hack and slash his way through a myriad of trials, make out with a hot wizard chick, and then beat the ever loving snot out of Nebserek. Then ride off into the sunset to continue being The Scorpion King. Not much to tell in that regards. However, this go around the movie is abysmally serious in nature. The original film was kind of a cheeky action/comedy, while the sequels just reveled in hamminess. Don Michael Paul has tried to infuse his sort of “military” harshness and seriousness to the movie, and brings in Zach McGowan, who pretty much helped ruin the Death Race franchise a month or so ago. Now, McGowan isn’t a horrible actor, but he’s limited in these DTV roles. I liked his cameo in The 100 as well as Jody in Shameless, but here he’s just raspy hulking guy who has to mumble his way through Don Michael Paul’s abysmal script. Overall, the movie is your basic DTV schlock, and not even that good schlock at that.
Rating:
Rated PG-13 for sequences of violence, suggestive content, and some partial nudity
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Scorpion King: Book of Souls is living proof that the series has sadly jumped the shark (even for a series that pretty much jumped the shark with the first sequel). I like The Mummy movies, and guiltily enjoy the first The Scorpion King movie, but the sequels have been nothing but DTV fodder for a late night viewing on the SyFy channel after you’ve had too many beers and can’t sleep. It’s cheap, tawdry, and completely devoid of any of the charm that the first movie had. I guiltily almost enjoyed the 3rd and 4th film due to Billy Zane, Ron Perlman and Victor Webster hamming it up, but this one tries to take itself a bit TOO seriously for it’s own good. Plus it unfortunately casts the same flat actor and director who ruined the semi fun Death Race sequels as well. The audio and video is definitely solid enough to enjoy for fans of the DTV sequels, but honestly, I would just skip it unless you’re a die hard fan.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Zach McGowan, Nathan Jones, Peter Mensah, Maylin Ng, Pearl Thusi, Howard Charles, Katy Louise Saunders
Directed by: Don Michael Paul
Written by: David Alton Hedges, Frank DeJohn
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, French, Spanish DTS 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, French, Spanish
Studio: Universal
Rated: PG-13
Runtime: 102 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: October 23rd, 2018
Recommendation: Skip it
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