What The Rock Is Cookin'
For the most part, The Scorpion King is just what you
think it will be: a series of smackdowns with opponents in
barbarian garb and elaborately "masculine" (that is, large)
jewelry, with time set aside for Dwayne Johnson to display his
considerable self-love. True, Johnson plays a character who is
not precisely The Rock, who rides a camel and beds a pretty girl
(Maxim cover girl Kelly Hu), and who works his way
through a plot that hasn't been written by the WWF scribes. But
these details are incidental. He is The Rock, and that's what
you're paying cash money to see. (That Vince McMahon executive
produced surely has something to do with the film's more
predictable pieces being in place.)
The plot -- concocted by David Hayter, Will Osborne, and
Mummy and Mummy Returns-maker Stephen Sommers,
from a story by Jonathan Hales -- is essentially extended
backstory on Mathayus, who made his first, brief, and
English-languageless appearance in The Mummy Returns. Now
you're reminded that he lives around 3000 B.C., as a member of a
"clan of cutthroats who kill for money," also known as the
Akkadians. At the beginning of The Scorpion King,
Mathayus is hired to assassinate Cassandra (Hu), the gorgeous
sorceress who foresees battle outcomes for the evil warlord
Memnon (Steven Brand). Mathayus begins his mission full of sand
(as they say), but soon finds himself in love with Cassandra
(whose near-nudity, occasionally wet, remains within PG-13 range
by strategic arrangement of her long hair).
Deciding to take out Memnon instead of "the woman" (as he comes
to call her affectionately, as in: "I've come for the woman...
and your head!"), Mathayus faces down legions of red-turbaned
flunkies on horseback, crashes through windows, fires
torpedo-like arrows (blowing adversaries through walls), chomps
on menacing fire ants, and vows vengeance for his murdered
brother. He also puts a sandstorm to good use, and adopts as his
requisite "comic sidekick" a nerdy horse thief named Arpid
(Grant Heslov), who warns him that no one goes into the Valley
of the Death: "That's why it's called the Valley of the Death."
Nothing stops Mathayus, though. By film's end, he's convinced a
whole squad of warriors to ride with him into the infamously
rowdy city of Gomorrah to set it straight to rescue Cassandra
and beat down Memnon. One of these new buddies is an initially
antagonistic warlord, the Nubian Balthazar (Michael Clarke
Duncan). In fact, they become such good friends that Mathayus
feels able to kid the mighty -- and mighty touchy -- Balthazar,
about his garish harem-girl disguise, referring to him as
"miss."
All this is to be expected, from the action scenes to the
one-liners to sidekicks to the damsel in distress (though she
proves quite capable of taking care of herself, after all). And
yet, despite (or because of) its predictability and despite (or
because of) its critical drubbing on its release, mainly by way
of unfavorable comparisons to other, primal "barbarian" movies
of the Arnoldian kind, The Scorpion King is a smashing
success. It crushed all competition at the box office, making a
whopping $36.2 million during its first weekend.
Certainly, much of its appeal has to do with The Rock, the
coolest, smoothest WWF wrestler ever, the much-beloved "People's
Champion." He's the guy who wrestles while wearing his movie
star sunglasses, whose single arched eyebrow speaks the
proverbial volumes, and who has never met a camera that hasn't
drooled all over him. The Rock is a star, straight up. The fact
that he also appears to have a sharp sense of humor about his
career, his longstanding theatrical conflict with McMahon, his
incredible physique, and his own as-yet limited acting abilities
certainly endears him to his fans, and perhaps to those only
considering becoming fans.
But even as The Rock's total magnificence recalls the glory
days of Schwarzenegger, there is something fundamentally and
crucially different about this next generation of action heroics
-- the shifting dimensions of race identifications and race
politics in The Rock's movie universe (and this is a universe
that extends far beyond that of the still predominantly white
WWF). The Scorpion King is one amazing jamboree of race
mixing and, at some level, even race rethinking. In part, this
is a function of the Rush Hour phenomenon, the sudden
"discovery" by producers and greenlighters that a blockbuster
hit might be made with stars who are not white, and beyond this,
the villains can all be identifiably "imperial" -- Memnon speaks
with a vaguely Euro-British accent, and his second, the insipid
Prince Takmet (Peter Facinelli), might be reduced to this high
concept: snotty class privilege.
As well, this shift is a function of a more general beiging of
race difference and The Rock's crossover celebrity, which tends
to render race invisible, or at least undiscussed. He's been
described in reviews of the film as "charismatic" and "exotic,"
without overt reference to his background (Miami-born, he's the
grandson of Samoan wrestler Peter Mavia), or to Hu's Chinese,
Hawaiian, and British heritage. Moreover, the good guys' team is
primarily comprised of Balthazar's mixed-race Amazonian
ass-kickers (including Queen Isis [Sherri Howard]), plus an
older white-guy scientist, Philos (Bernard Hill), who behaves
more or less like the Professor on Gilligan's Island,
pseudo-inventing catapults and gunpowder, and quite pleasantly
surprising himself when his experiments work out.
As they infiltrate the castle and the film heads toward its
slam-bang, hugely actionated finale, the SK's motley crew
occasionally resemble the intrepid posse in The Wizard of
Oz, except that they spread out, much like the characters in
The Mummy Returns, in a concerted effort to provide
multiple climaxes. Isis and her girls battle a bunch of deadmeat
Red Turbans, Balthazar takes out that wussy boy Takmet, and
Mathayus spends several delectably drawn out moments with his
arch-enemy, the egomaniacal slimeball Memnon, complete with the
fearful moment when Cassandra's vision of her fabulous new
boyfriend's death appears to come true, in slow motion, with
hair flying and flames lighting up his perfectly oiled pecs.
It's a beautiful, and beautifully corny, sight, visibly grander
and certainly costlier than The Rock might have managed in a
wrestling arena. The investment appears to have paid off. Dwayne
Johnson is well on his way to international superstardom. And
perhaps, action pictures are on their way to reflecting the
vastly diverse audience they pursue so furiously.
25 April 2002