Famke Janssen Movie:

R.P.M.



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Famke Janssen Movie:
R.P.M.



Movie
R.P.M.
R.P.M.
List Price: $9.98Label: 20th Century Fox

Salesrank: 106869

Released: December 17, 2002
Our Price: $1.67
Used Price: $0.01
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • DVD
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • David Arquette
  • Emmanuelle Seigner
  • Famke Janssen
  • Steve John Shepherd
  • Stephen Yardley
  • Editorial Review:
    David Arquette's offbeat charm will likely never make him a leading man. That's part of the fun of RPM, a tongue-in-cheek Euro-American car-jacking adventure about an American techno wizard whose sideline is stealing vintage autos for fun and... well, mostly just for fun. When New York gets too hot for him he flies off to Europe, heists his way through the coolest vintage autos in the south of France, and then hires himself out to a corporate pirate who desires a tightly guarded experimental car that runs without gas. Famke Janssen slinks her way through the film as Arquette's sexy nemesis, who matches him car for car and races him to the prize, and Emmanuelle Seigner costars as one of Arquette's victims won over by his goofy allure. It's a cute, if silly, little picture that plays like a low-budget James Bond spoof: cool gadgets, sexy women, handsome sports cars, all set in the lovely countryside of southern France. Ian Sharp isn't much of an action director but he captures the breezy spirit of the wisecracking script (cowritten by Pulp Fiction's Roger Avary). Like Arquette, he doesn't take any of it seriously either, and it works for this amusing little lark of an action-comedy. --Sean Axmaker

    R.P.M. Reviews:
    Ridiculous Pathetic Moronic 2 Star Review
    2009-10-12 - Luke Delson (David Arquette) is a car thief who specializes in liberating classic cars from unappreciative owners. When the heat from Interpol agents gets too hot for him stateside, he flees to France where he helps a big time thief named Chiarkos steal as many classic cars as they can. What Luke doesn't know is that Chiarkos has hired another thief: a leggy brunette named Claudia (Famke Janssen). Luke and Claudia have a history together and are bitter rivals. Luke bristles at the thought of partnering with Claudia, so the two compete against each other to see who can bring in the most cars. Meanwhile, a crazy scientist has developed a new fuel efficient car called the RPM. All sorts of shady businessmen, including Chiarkos, desperately want it. He offers Luke an extra couple of million if he'll get it for him. When Claudia learns of this secret deal she gets herself a partner and plans to steal the car before Luke can. All kinds of car chases and heists ensue. The film sucks thanks to embarrassing acting, horrible writing and unimpressive action scenes. This is disappointing since Arquette, Janssen and Emmanuelle Seigner, who plays Arquette's love interest, are good and reliable actors. Here their performances are amateurish and painful to watch. I'll give them the benefit of the doubt though since the script doesn't give them anything to work with. The film was originally planned as the sophomore effort of 'Pulp Fiction' co-writer Roger Avary, but when he couldn't get the cast he wanted due to budget problems he dropped out. According to Amazon and IMDB some of his writing remains intact. It's easy to spot because it's the only dialogue that's actually good. Even though the film is bad it's kind of fun at times too. It knows it's trash and rather than try to be anything else it revels in the fact. I'd almost say that the film is a so bad it's good candidate. Besides, even when everything else about it sucks you have the gorgeous faces of Janssen and Seigner to ogle.

    For race car and collectible car voyeurs, in the youth segment 1 Star Review
    2007-06-07 - RPM is a film that, despite all its flaws, visibly was never intended
    for any other niche audience, than race car voyeurs and the below 12
    year old age bracket. Assuming this was RPM's original design, it
    suceeded very well in its objective. For all other audiences, despite
    the script's promised excitement, it comes up short in entertainment
    value as a rental or at the theatres.

    The biggest flaw is the selection of the leading actor, who, despite
    all his efforts, easy-going personality, articulate physical and
    verbal expression, is a poor match for a provokative, photogenic and
    spontaneous woman like Famke Janssen, sporting an image of a junior
    high school student. Arquette is also paired with the intriguing,
    young beauty Emmanuelle Seigner, and somehow this also doesn't seem
    entirely appropriate, although not as much.

    The leading actor's conduct seems in line with a 17 year old Peter
    Sellers, with nervous, amateur acting, lacking subtlety, clearly
    inexperienced, relying heavily on personal mannerisms, subjective
    tic's that professional actors don't intermix, or confuse with one
    another, the personal and the business. Perhaps to cover this up,
    after 2/3 of the movie is spent, the Director apparently suggested
    to the Arquette to light up a smoke on a regular basis towards the
    last 1/3 of the movie, in almost every scene.

    The script's dialog, seems not to flow naturally, and this sometimes
    results in all of the actors delivering a "wooden" performance or
    interaction.

    There is no question, that the filming of over 40 or 50 luxury and
    rare collection automobiles is fascinating, and innovative for those
    who are not mechanics or visitors of race tracks and museums. The
    action scenes involving these cars, is successfully done, and those
    are the high points of the film.

    As for the soundtrack, too often sewage-grade "rock" music was
    selected, meaning instruments apparently were handed to amateur
    musicians who had trouble coming up with anything minimally
    acceptable. This, when coupled with the leading actor's amateur
    acting, turns the audience's experience from bad to worse.

    What impoverished the film, (aside from the previously mentioned
    aspects), is the lack in the story's coherence, logic and free flow
    in terms of following it over 90 mins. Also, the special gizmo
    allowing the remote control of race cars from 2 km away seems totally
    implausible, and for that reason alone is annoying from the fantasy
    such a device exists.

    The fact that German and French actors were selected, is fine in
    itself, except for the difficulty in natural expression in English
    for those same actors. The European filming locations actually are
    welcomed, however, in the city and countryside action stunt scenes
    mainly.

    RPM could have redeemed itself, from the cool cars had there been
    humor, but the audience will find only 1 or 2 genuine moments for
    laughs in the entire work, as most of it misses the mark, or is
    clumsily done.

    The fact that there is a "narrative" from Arquette, speaking over the
    action is the final nail in RPM's coffin, considering the actor was
    already a liability.

    Overall, RPM as a project had significant potential, but the flaws
    already mentioned when added to its many "rough edges" doesn't meet
    the audience's standard, despite a high quality cinematography.

    It deserves it 4 Star Review
    2005-08-31 - It really is a good movie, It has a half way decent plot (David is going to steal an expensive car) and it has some cool chase scenes. The cast is b and c list people. It has some pretty crappy acting, but is really worth 1.00 +S&H used. I paid 13.oo for it, and I think it was worth it, I guess I'm just crazy..Well worth to buy in my opinion. A must for people who love car movies.

    I Should Have Read the Reviews Before I Bought This 1 Star Review
    2004-10-18 - I'd seen this dvd floating around the bargain bins for some time. Finally I figured the price was right so maybe I'd check it out. I should have saved my money.
    Now, I'm a sucker for low budget B-movies. Usually you get what you expect(or deserve) when you buy or rent them. "RPM" had a name cast and was nicely packaged so I expected a derivative but enteraining action flick. Boy was I wrong. Watching paint dry is a much better way to spend 90 minutes.
    Actually I couldn't even make it through the whole thing. I'm just not that masochistic. I watched the first half hour and then skipped to the later scenes to see if it would get any better. It didn't.
    I can usually find some sort of redeeming quality for even the worst film, but I'm still scratching my head over this pointless and childish affair. Seriously, I'm going to at least read some online reviews before I buy another movie.

    A Car Wreck of a Movie 1 Star Review
    2004-04-05 - There are so many things wrong with this movie that I don't know where to start. I think it was Fox's way of capitalizing on the rush of car movies in the last few years.

    My biggest problem is the plot. There are holes and side plots that really make no sense. Luke is a lot like Ferris Bueller, he gets in trouble and causes problems. His biggest problem is he's addicted to stealing classic cars, sometimes from right under their owner's noses. When his most recent escapade lands him in trouble with the law he jets off to Europe until it all blows over.

    In addition to Luke's escapades as a classic car thief, and his rivalry with Claudia, who turns out is his sister, there's a side plot involving a woman from the states trying to arrest Luke, and an Italian detective who'd rather hop into the sack with her than help her solve the case. These two are thrown into the plot at random times, almost as comic relief, but it's not funny, and really has very little to do with the movie.

    The plot gets even more complicated when you throw in a pretty girl for Luke to fall for, who just so happens to be tied into a ring of car thieves who want the RPM, a revolutionary prototype car. They offer Luke lots of money to steal it, and then up the odds by threatening the pretty girl he's gotten himself attached to. The pretty girl seems almost as an afterthought, they would have done better to offer Luke a way out of his problem in the US, it would have made him just as likely to steal the car.

    The whole movie is almost like a train wreck. Not only does the plot jump around and take weird side turns when you least expect it, but the dialog is poor, and the characters seem built on stereotypes and have no personalities of their own. Building interesting, complex characters would have been lost on the script though, it too is built on stereotypes and already well used plot devices.

    The only saving grace of the movie was the nice cars. There are a lot of nice classic cars in the movie, and you can momentarily lose yourself in their grace and looks before you're pulled back to realize that the plot stinks, the premise isn't very interesting, and overall it's just a very bad movie. If you insist on watching it, please consider renting or borrowing it instead of purchasing.










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