PRIMAL
(2019)
Starring
Nicholas Cage, Famke Janssen, Kevin Durand, Michael Imperioli,
Lamonica Garret. Directed by Nicholas Powell. (97 min)
ON
BLU-RAY FROM LIONSGATE
Review
by Tiger the Terrible😸
National
treasure Nicholas Cage squares-off against a deadly jungle cat and
a vicious assassin on-board a cargo ship. Man, I don’t see how
anyone could pass that up. It’s a concept as wonderfully bonkers
as Samuel L. Jackson battling Snakes on a Plane. Primal
doesn’t milk its premise to the campy heights of that kitschy
classic, but it’s a lot more fun than the average Nick Cage Movie
of the Week.
Cage
plays Frank Walsh, a grizzled, grumpy game hunter who traps wild
animals to sell to zoos. His latest haul includes birds, angry
monkeys, poisonous snakes and – his biggest prize – a rare white
jaguar. Sharing the boat ride home, however, is rogue assassin
Richard Loffler (Kevin Durand), who’s been captured by U.S. forces
and being returned in chains to stand trial for his crimes.
Naturally, he manages to escape and frees all the animals. So now
it’s man vs. man and man vs. nature, with Loffler and the
cat picking off the supporting cast one by one.
"BOY FOR SALE!" |
Primal
has less actual animal action than I hoped. Not that the conflict
involving Loffler isn’t enjoyable. Durand does a decent job playing
your standard over-confident bad guy, but watching nature get even is
a lot more entertaining, especially in an unusual setting. Still, the
beasties manage to get-in their licks here and there. Those scenes
are the goofiest, therefore the liveliest, even if the CGI-rendered
jaguar is laughably unconvincing.
"I thought I paid this." |
Cage
attacks his role with his inimitable brand of gusto, tongue planted
firmly in-cheek, which is always enjoyable. Less vital is Famke
Janssen as Ellen Taylor. She plays a Navy doctor tasked with
monitoring Loffler’s health, but mostly exists to bicker with Cage
and place herself in peril. The remaining cast – including Michael
Imperioli – are essentially cannon fodder (or cat food).
Well
made on a relatively limited budget, Primal won’t win any
Oscars, but it’s hardly Razzie-worthy, either. Fast-paced and
enjoyably silly, this features Nick Cage in prime
any-role-to-pay-off-my-debts mode. And that isn’t always a
bad thing, especially once he breaks-out his trusty blowgun.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
FEATURETTE
- “The
Making of Primal”
DIGITAL
COPY
KITTY CONSENSUS:
NOT BAD. LIKE CAT CHOW.
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