SPLICED Magazine Issue 01 Oct/Nov 2013 | Page 127

SPLICED MOVIES / REVIEW / R.I.P.D. ISSUE 01 by Chris Savides The Rest in Peace Department or R.I.P.D. is a legendary otherworldly police force tasked with protecting mankind from monstrous and vulgar souls disguised among the living as ordinary people. Watch the trailer This is Ryan Reynolds's fourth appearance in a film adapted from a comic book. He also played Hannibal King in Blade: Trinity, Deadpool in X-Men Origins: Wolverine and Hal Jordan in Green Lantern. All three films garnered criticism from fans, this film looks to do more of the same. At least Reynolds is consistent. These souls are known as Deados who refuse to move peacefully to the afterlife. Enter Sheriff Roy Pulsifer played by the Dude himself Jeff Bridges (The Big Lebowski, True Grit) and recently deceased wisecracking detective Nick Walker played by Ryan Reynolds (Safe House, The Proposal). Bridges and Reynolds in a buddy-cop f antasy film about the afterlife, it should be awesome right? What if I told you that Robert Schwentke, director of 2010's Red, was the man in charge of bringing all this awesomeness to the silver screen? This should be a fun ride full of action and great effects! Can’t wait, right? Well, no. Unfortunately for R.I.P.D. and people watching it, it’s far from being anything like that, and suffers from a fatal dose of Lifeless Script Syndrome, and is borderline one of the worst comic movie adaptations ever. In fact, Jonah Hex is a better film than this (gasp!). R.I.P.D. tries to be the paranormal version of Men in Black meets Ghostbusters. Replace the aliens with evil Deados and it’s essentially the same idea, except Men in Black did it better, and Ghostbusters did it funnier and classier. Men in Black was a fresh original idea at the time, whereas R.I.P.D. feels like it’s a copy/ paste job of pretty much everything we’ve ever seen before. There isn’t an original idea in this movie. The effects are even rehashes of what we’ve seen before, and honestly in certain scenes the CGI looks like it’s a decade old. Here’s the brief, (and I do mean brief, I couldn’t have made it longer if I watched the movie in slow motion) story outline: Detective Nick Walker tragically gets killed in the line of duty, and ends up in that precinct in the sky. We meet Proctor played by Mary-Louise Parker, a welcome sight as always, who informs Walker that they could use a cop with his skills and he subsequently gets partnered up with Roy, a veteran and legend of the R.I.P.D. They get sent to earth to uncover Deados disguised as everyday humans. In a cruel twist of fate though our heroes do not look like their former 127