| A silly little action
flick, The Chill Factor preaches that
"Keeping Cool is a Matter of Life and
Death." But they dont mean
"cool" like the Fonz - they mean
literally cool, like Hillary Clinton. In the
worst and most unintentionally hysterical rip-off
of Speed yet, the films two stars
race across Montana to get a deadly biological
weapon to an Army base before get this
the temperature of the chemical hits fifty
degrees. The weapon, called
Elvis, was created over ten years ago by an Army
scientist, played by David Paymer (Payback).
I think his name is actually Dr. Richard Long (or
directory style - Long, Dick), but Im not
sure. While isolated on a tiny desert island,
Long tested a very small amount of Elvis before
his computer was done compiling data on the
deadly agent. Originally intended to affect a
200-yard radius around the test site, Elvis
instead engulfs the entire five-mile island,
killing all eighteen men that were not located
within the safety of the control building.
Long
escaped with a slap on the wrist, but his Colonel
(played by Peter Firth, Mighty Joe Young)
is tossed in Leavenworth for ten years. Of course
when he gets out of the clink, he wants to kill
Long, steal Elvis and sell it to foreign
countries for - insert Dr. Evil voice here - 100
million dollars. So Firth heads to Longs
current research facility in Jerome, Montana with
a group of ninja-types. Long story short, the
doctor lives long enough to get Elvis out of
there, and Elvis ends up with Longs fishing
buddy Mason (played by Skeet Ulrich, The
Newton Boys), who works the late shift at
Darlenes Diner.
Learning
about Elvis temperature restrictions, Mason
commandeers an ice cream delivery truck and,
together with its driver (played by Cuba Gooding
Jr., Instinct), the two spend the
remaining hour and a half running from the
Colonel and his garrison of black-clad foot
soldiers. Ulrich has the charisma of an orange
and Gooding is like Martin Lawrence turned up to
eleven. Shouldnt Oscar winners be held to
higher standards than the slop hes been
pushing? The only way this could have been worse
is if Jared Leto and Master P were cast in the
leading roles.
Among
the films highlights are Ulrich and
Gooding, Jr. using a rowboat to sled down the
face of a mountain, which at first sight is a
straight drop-off, but when theyre actually
hurtling down the hill it has somehow transformed
into a less dangerous forty-five-degree angle.
And there is the obligatory fight on the roof of
the ice cream truck as it races in and out of
tunnels bored into the mountain, which relegates
the bad guy to a Wile-E.-Coyote-type fate. Are
people still entertained by this? Thanks to the
weapon being nicknamed Elvis, there are also
quite a few witty lines like "Elvis has
entered the building" and snappy comebacks
to questions like "Wheres
Elvis?": "Dead, last time I
checked."
Not to
be confused with the 1990 Gary Crosby pic of the
same name, or the short-lived 1972 Robert
Culp/Eli Wallach televison series, Factor
is the directorial debut of Hugh Johnson (insert
additional penis joke here), who was previously
the cinematographer on G.I. Jane. The film
was scripted by Drew Gitlin and Mike Cheda, the
former in his debut and the latter the
screenwriter for something called The Shape of
Things to Come, a sci-fi thriller that only
played in Canadian theaters when released in
1979. Plus, his name is almost a type of cheese,
so that should tell you something, too.
1:42
- for violence and
language
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