SPLICED Magazine Issue 01 Oct/Nov 2013 | Page 129

SPLICED MOVIES / ISSUE 01 REVIEW / R.I.P.D. Jeff Bridges has spoken out about his role in RIPD since the film's release, saying he was disappointed with how the film turned out after he had so much fun playing the character. about Kevin Bacon’s role as Nick’s partner, there’s no sense of history between the two which leaves you wondering why you should invest any emotion in them. There is a saving grace though, and that comes in the form of Jeff Bridges. One gets the feeling that Bridges had a ball acting in this movie. With his western lawman swagger and mouth-full-of-pebbles enunciation of words, he is always entertaining when he has screen time. He plays the role of Roy as a mix between True Grit ’s Rooster Cogburn and a pinch of the Big Lebowski. He’s the Agent K of R.I.P.D., the veteran to Walker’s rookie cop, but even in the afterlife, Roy still has his demons; he carries several hundred years of grudges and baggage from his past, especially toward the coyotes that picked his bones clean after he was shot. As fun as it is to watch Bridges and Parker it isn’t enough to resurrect the film. If you’re in the mood for turning off your brain then go watch R.I.P.D., you’ll be hoping for the sweet release of death before the film is over, don’t say we didn’t warn you.? 3 Verdict For a summer blockbuster R.I.P.D. is an underwhelming romp through the afterlife in every single way, with mediocre effects and a generic story, with cliché after cliché appearing minute after painful minute. 129