The Chronicles of Riddick (Special Edition) DVD Review:
After
five years in a self-imposed exile, Riddick (Diesel) is forced
out of isolation when a team of mercenaries, lead by old foe
Toombs (Chinlund), come looking for him. After easily dealing
with the hired help, Riddick steals their ship and heads back
to civilization to find out why Iman (David), the only man who
knew where he was, portrayed him. When he arrives on Helion
Prime, he finds that the planet is on the verge of invasion
by the Necromongers, an army like no one has ever seen who take
over planets and destroys them, if they don’t covert to
their cause.
Escaping from a planet
of monsters in his previous adventure, Riddick now takes on
a whole army, as his story continues. The problem is that we
don’t really learn anything more about him.
Pitch Black was a
Sci-Fi sleeper hit that introduced the world to the very cool
anti-hero and launched Vin Diesel’s leading man career.
It was a low budget, high concept piece that was very good science
fiction. For the sequel writer/director David Twohy leaves the
monsters behind and takes the character in a different direction.
This is a change from your usual sequel path and a welcome one
but the problem is that he doesn’t really know where it
is going.
The second adventure
doesn’t really advance the character of Riddick as much
as it should do. Here Twohy had the chance to tell you more
about the character’s backstory like where did he come
from, why does he have such a murderous disposition and is he
finally feeling any guilt for his actions. Instead all we find
out is that he is a Furyan, with no explanation as to what these
people are or where they came from. This is just one of the
many large plot holes that have no explanation.
The performances
are fine however. Vin Diesel gets back into his best role with
ease, finding again that menace and darkness that made the character
so memoriable in the first place. This is the role that was
made for him to play and he is what makes Riddick such a watchable
anti-hero. Karl Urban continues his run of bringing good, strong,
attention grabbing characters to the screen. As Vaako he exudes
a dark foreboding presence, even if the character does have
a silly mullet. Colm Feore always plays the bad guy with skill,
making him instantly dislikeable and always memorable. Nick
Chinlund also excels in the bad guy stakes as Toombs, the mercenary
with a grudge against Riddick after their first meeting in the
animated sequel/prequel Dark Fury. Alexa Davalos proves again
she is a young actress to watch as she demonstrates that she
is extremely good at action (Anyone who has seen the Angel TV
series will already know that).
Thandie Newton and
Dame Judi Dench don’t fair so well however as each of
them has very underdeveloped characters. Newton’s Dame
Vaako motivation for power is never really explained and goes
against the Necromonger religion and the brainwashing that each
new disciple goes through. Judi Dench’s Aereon is even
more lacking, as you don’t even know why the character
is there, other than to provide narration. She might be elemental
but that seems to be her only purpose.
The Chronicles of
Riddick is a visually stunning piece of science fiction but
with today’s modern computer technology, that is only
to be expected. What the film is is a wasted opportunity that
has a very incomprehensible story in parts that needs much more
backstory and character development to improve its clarity.
The Riddick character is a good one that could have had many
stories to tell but after this outing it looks like we won’t
get to see any of them, however dark it gets.
Star Rating = * *
The Director’s
Cut
While not the great
improvement that fans might have been wishing for, this version
of ‘The Chronicles of Riddick’ addresses some of
the shortcomings that came with the theatrical release. The
film now includes more of the Furyan backstory allowing us an
insight into Riddick’s people and background. We also
see more of Kyra, as the extra 14 minutes of footage add more
character development and explanation to the story.
This version still
suffers from the problem that this story is part of a collection
of adventures as it leaves many plot points unresolved, as writer/director
David Twohy and actor Vin Diesel expected the movie to do better
than it did. This assumption affects the movie tremendously
and makes you think the filmmakers and studio had the word franchise
in mind and never thought that the movie might not do well at
the box office.
The director’s
cut is a better version of the movie but only just. While it
does answer some of the criticisms labelled at the original
release, it only just manages to take this from a very average
movie to one that is more watchable.
Star Rating = * *
*
PICTURE & SOUND
Presented in 2.35:1
Anamorphic Widescreen with a Dolby Digital 5.1 surround soundtrack,
this is an excellent transfer, as you’d except from a
modern film. Director David Twohy’s science fiction world
is vividly realised with a marvellous DVD transfer. The picture
quality is first rate, crystal clear throughout and the sound
quality is equally as good, especially during the energetic
action sequences.
BONUS FEATURES
2-Disc Director’s
Cut version
Disc 1
Introduction by David
Twohy (0.47 mins)
The writer/director
provides a foreword before the start of the movie.
Audio Commentary
with writer/director David Twohy and actors Karl Urban and Alexa
Davalos
The writer/director,
and the actors playing Vaako and Kyra come together to talk
about ‘The Chronicles of Riddick’. With David Twohy
and Alexa Davalos in London and Karl Urban in New Zealand, the
trio still manage to provide an informative track for the movie.
The director does do most of the talking, as the trio regale
us with stories about casting, the characters, the plot and
how they decided to make this sequel very different from ‘Pitch
Black’. The trio also talk about the new added scenes
that appear in the director’s cut, as well as the different
ending to the movie. This is a decent commentary that fans should
enjoy but David Twohy does have the tendency to dominate the
proceedings.
Deleted Scenes (8.04
mins)
With optional commentary
by director David Twohy these deleted scenes entitled ‘Aereon
and Iman on Helion’, ‘Original Planet UV 6’
and ‘Toombs demise’ are scenes that didn’t
make it into the director’s cut of the movie.
Riddick Insider:
Facts on Demand
As you watch the
movie, interesting titbits about the production of the movie,
the cast, the characters and the world that Riddick inhabits
are shown on screen.
Disc 2
Virtual Guide to
the Chronicles of Riddick (7.40 mins)
Toombs, Dame Vaako,
the Lord Marshal, Kyra, Imam and Aereon inform you about the
Conquest Icon, Crematoria, Elementals, Helion Prime, Planet
U.V.6, The Lord Marshal, the Necromongers, the Necropolis, New
Mecca and the Quasi-Deads.
Toombs’ chase
Log (9.58 mins)
Mercenary Tombs details
his 92 day pursuit of Riddick, revealing how he got his crew
together and the clues he uncovered to track the most wanted
man in the Universe down.
Visual Effects Revealed
(6.02 mins)
Writer/Director David
Twohy, visual effects supervisor Peter Chiang and Rhythm and
Hues digital effects team members Sean McPherson, Mike O’Neal
and Mike Wassell reveal the secrets of bring the world of Riddick
to life on the silver the screen. This short featurette details
how the Crematoria, Hellhounds and Elemental effects where produced.
Riddick’s Worlds
Vin Diesel’s
Guided Tour (3.11 mins)
Riddick himself, Vin Diesel takes you on a guided tour of the
sets for New Mecca, Crematoria, the Basilica, the Quasi-grotto
and UV Planet.
Interactive 360o
View of the Sets
Take an interactive
tour of the Basilica Centre Floor, Helion Fountain Square, Crematoria
Main Hanger, The Lord Marshall’s Throne, Imam’s
Living Room, Quasi-grotto, Planet U.V.6 and the Slam Centre.
Creation of New Mecca
(11.13 mins)
Writer/director David
Twohy, producers Scott Kroopf and George Zakk, production designer
Holger Gross, production illustrator Jim Martin, prop master
Tom Tomlinson, visual effects supervisor Ian Hunter, costume
designer Ellen Mirojnick and stars Vin Diesel, Judi Dench and
Keith David take you behind the scenes of Helion Prime. Here
we see the design of the planet and how its look, people and
costumes were influenced and designed. We also see how the special
effects for the siege of Helion were created, highlighting the
weapons and the spaceship crash.
Riddick Rises (13.27
mins)
Writer/director David
Twohy, producers Scott Kroopf and George Zakk, production designer
Holger Gross, production illustrator Jim Martin, supervising
art director Kevin Ishioka, stunt coordinator Bob Brown and
stars Vin Diesel, Nick Chinlund and Alexa Davalos talk about
continuing the story of Riddick. The featurette looks into the
character, revealing how he has changed since ‘Pitch Black’
and the characters he interacts with, namely Kyra and Toombs.
Keep what you Kill
(17.31 mins)
Writer/director David
Twohy, producers Scott Kroopf and George Zakk, production designer
Holger Gross, costume designer Ellen Mirojnick, makeup designer
Ve Neil and stars Vin Diesel, Colm Feore, Linus Roache, Karl
Urban and Thandie Newton talk about the Necromongers. Covering
the Lord Marshal, The Purifier, Vaako and Dame Vaako, the featurette
looks into there design, costumes and characters. The Necromongers
themselves are also looked into, specialising in there ships
and weapons.
Interactive Production
Calendar (30.56 mins)
From May 12th 2003
until May 3rd 2004, you can look at snippets from the total
ninety days that ‘The Chronicles of Riddick’ was
in production. With behind the scenes footage and shot featurettes
into what was going on during that day, you can watch the film
progress through its production. This offers a fascinating insight
into the production of a major Hollywood movie.
Trailers
Watch the trailers
for ‘The Chronicles of Riddick: Pitch Black’, ‘The
Chronicles of Riddick: Dark Fury’, ‘Van Helsing’
and ‘The Bourne Supremacy’
OVERALL
After the lacklustre
release of the theatrical cut, ‘The Chronicles of Riddick’
finally gets the DVD release with the Director’s Cut.
As well as all the features from the single-disc release we
also have a good commentary track and featurettes that was sadly
missing from that version. For fans, this should be the one
that they purchase as it is a better version of the movie and
the extras are comprehensive.
DVD Star Rating =
* * * *
Single Disc Version
Virtual Guide to
the Chronicles of Riddick (7.40 mins)
Toombs, Dame Vaako,
the Lord Marshal, Kyra, Imam and Aereon inform you about the
Conquest Icon, Crematoria, Elementals, Helion Prime, Planet
U.V.6, The Lord Marshal, the Necromongers, the Necropolis, New
Mecca and the Quasi-Deads.
Toombs’ chase
Log (9.58 mins)
Mercenary Tombs details
his 92 day pursuit of Riddick, revealing how he got his crew
together and the clues he uncovered to track the most wanted
man in the Universe down.
Riddick Insider:
Facts on Demand
As you watch the
movie, interesting titbits about the production of the movie,
the cast, the characters and the world that Riddick inhabits
are shown on screen.
Visual Effects Revealed
(6.02 mins)
Writer/Director David
Twohy, visual effects supervisor Peter Chiang and Rhythm and
Hues digital effects team members Sean McPherson, Mike O’Neal
and Mike Wassell reveal the secrets of bring the world of Riddick
to life on the silver the screen. This short featurette details
how the Crematoria, Hellhounds and Elemental effects where produced.
Riddick’s Worlds
Vin Diesel’s
Guided Tour (3.11 mins)
Riddick himself, Vin Diesel takes you on a guided tour of the
sets for New Mecca, Crematoria, the Basilica, the Quasi-grotto
and UV Planet.
Interactive 360o
View of the Sets
Take an interactive
tour of the Basilica Centre Floor, Helion Fountain Square, Crematoria
Main Hanger, The Lord Marshall’s Throne, Imam’s
Living Room, Quasi-grotto, Planet U.V.6 and the Slam Centre.
DVD ROM
Place the DVD in
your PCs DVD ROM player to open up more information about the
Chronicles of Riddick.
Trailers
Watch previews of
The Chronicles of Riddick: Pitch Black SE, The Chronicles of
Riddick: Dark Fury, Van Helsing, The Bourne Supremacy and Billy
Elliot: The Musical
The Chronicles of
Riddick: Escape From Butcher Bay
Place the DVD in
your X-Box console and you will be able to play a complete level
of the highly acclaimed game The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape
From Butcher Bay.
OVERALL
A film that was a
bit lacklustre receives a very average DVD release. This is
a basic standalone release for people who are either not fans
or just want to rent the movie. Riddick fans should purchase
the Director’s Cut version, as the 2-disc version includes
almost the entire set of extras featured in this version anyway.
The
Chronicles of Riddick (Special Edition) Director:
David
Twohy
The
Chronicles of Riddick (Special Edition) Written By:
David Twohy
The Chronicles
of Riddick (Special Edition) Cast:
Vin
Diesel, Colm Feore, Thandie Newton, Judi Dench, Karl
Urban, Nick Chinlund, Alexa Davalos and Keith David