![]() Despite his creepy mastery as a suspense director, Polanski's acting abilities tend toward the broad side his last job in front of the camera was a Polish comedy, Zemsta (2002), that was every bit as awful as Rush Hour 3. (In contrast, Chan himself has directed over a dozen movies with skill far beyond Ratner's.) Despite all this, Ratner has somehow attracted some impressive talents to his movie: Ingmar Bergman veteran Max Von Sydow, French supermodel NoƩmie Lenoir, and none other than Roman Polanski as the chief of Paris police. Meanwhile, Ratner still hasn't learned how to photograph Chan's fighting style, and he sacrifices clarity for a junky jumble, too close and abrupt. As a result, these two characters never connect or form any kind of chemistry. Tucker appears to be acting entirely outside of the film, whereas the cheerless Chan appears to be performing from too far within it he looks constantly sad and worried, as if all the "fun" were really getting him down. The wobbly plot stops dead every so often so that Tucker can perform his shtick, then resumes when he's finished. Nathanson and director Brett Ratner's biggest crime, however, is their inability to combine comedy and action, and their ineptitude at each element by itself. If you can't make the connection between an assassinated Chinese ambassador and Paris, neither can writer Jeff Nathanson, who leaves plot holes big enough for the Eiffel Tower to pass through. ![]() Of course, the ambassador is murdered and Carter and Lee find themselves flying to Paris to find a secret list that contains the names of the top 13 Triad leaders. At the start of this inept, brain-dead new sequel, his detective James Carter has been understandably demoted to directing traffic, while Chief Inspector Lee (Jackie Chan) has been assigned to protect a Chinese Ambassador, who in turn is assigned to bring down the Triads. Chris Tucker's humor has the stale stench of jokes from a century ago, made for people who found the Three Stooges too witty and sophisticated. Nine years have passed since Rush Hour and six since Rush Hour 2, and everything about Rush Hour 3 feels tired and old. Book Review: Cult Filmmakers: 50 Movie Mavericks You Need to Know.Book Review: Sam Wasson's The Big Goodbye: Chinatown and the Last Years of Hollywood.Book Reviews - Guillermo Del Toro: The Iconic Filmmaker and His Work & The Unofficial Hocus Pocus Cookbook.Book Review: Escape Into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions.The 2022 San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle Awards.Book Review: Once Upon a Rind In Hollywood.Peter Nicks on Stephen Curry: Underrated.
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