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John
Carpenter's Ghost's of Mars Movie Review:
Yes,
I know... another summer, another movie about Mars...
With Ghosts of Mars, John Carpenter gives us his take on
the old
'space cops have to transfer a dangerous prisoner and all
hell breaks loose forcing the cops and the prisoner to work
together' plotline which we've all seen more times than
we care to remember. Heading up this epic is the main man,
name above the title, STAR of the movie, Ice Cube. Now,
nothing against Ice, I mean he's cool, he's chill, and above
all he's frosty, but is this the only guy they could find
to headline this movie? They must not have tried very hard,
since I'm fairly certain Coolio could have done as well
for much less money. Perhaps they did ask and Coolio gave
them the cold shoulder.
The story concerns members of the Mars Police Force who
must travel to a desolate mining colony to pick up a very
dangerous prisoner, Ice Cube, and take him back to stand
trail for mass murder. Before they know it, they're in the
same condition as the audience watching them; right in the
middle of an awful bloody mess. And surprise, as with all
space mining colonies, some very nasty 'co-star killers'
are lying in wait.
This seems like a simple story to tell, but by the enormous
amount of monotonous voiceover, pointless flashback and
unnecessary exposition, you'd never know it. These devices
are often used in films for artistic reasons and dramatic
effect, but in Ghosts of Mars they were obviously used to
patch a movie that just wasn't working.
The M.P.F. officers find that the miners have all apparently
gone insane, since they now spend most of their time screaming
and moaning, practicing self-mutilation, piercing their
body parts and occasionally decapitating one another. Either
they've all become possessed by an ancient, long dormant
spirit-like alien presence, or they've just been listening
to too many Marilyn Manson CDs. I'm still not sure which
was the actual case.
The police are a very small group, far too few to provide
for an acceptable body-count, so joining the cast of victims
are a bunch of Ice Cube's space-homies, who attempt to aid
his escape. Hey, now there's an idea for a Mars movie! Space
Homies! I can see it now... Ice Cube and his crew cruising
the Martian wastelands in their gold-plated stretch hover-limo.
They could get the Wayans brothers to script and direct!
It'll be great! I wish I'd seen that movie instead of this
one.
Anyway, enough about plot. You can imagine what happens
next and you would be right. Knowing John Carpenter's previous
work, I had imagined that this story would be told with
a tongue-in-cheek style, much like Big Trouble in Little
China and Escape From L.A., which were both more satirical
than serious. Unfortunately, Ghosts of Mars doesn't seem
to have that essential 'we know this is cheesy' attitude
that may have raised it to cult status. Also, because the
story is really told by some very overworked film editors
who have attempted to hide it's flaws, there aren't many
memorable scenes to speak of.
Lastly, ninety percent of this movie is a flashback which
is being told by one of the characters. The rule here is
that, because it's a personal recollection, there should
be no scenes within the flashback that do not involve the
character telling the story. That's called 'logic'. For
most of the film, those editors mentioned earlier do a pretty
good job of this, but near the end, even this rule is thrown
out in favor of an overblown finale.
So, that's another lousy Mars movie to add to the list.
I suppose I deserved to suffer through Ghost of Mars, since
I didn't heed my own warnings based on Mission to Mars and
Red Planet. When will I ever learn?
Allen Vestal
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John Carpenter's Ghost's of Mars
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