Punisher: War Zone - Movie Review and Synopsis

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

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Category: Movies. Tags: , , , , , , , , , .

War Zone Infamous vigilante, anti-hero Frank Castle (Ray Stevenson) is six years into his vengeance driven zeal as the Punisher when he brutally assaults a “beat the rap” party for notorious mob boss Gaitano Ceasar. During the course of the massacre, he hideously disfigures overeager gangster Billy Russoti (Dominic West) and murders a mafia lackey who turns out to be an undercover FBI agent.

Agent Paul Budiansky (Colin Salmon), the ex-partner of the undercover Fed, joins the NYPD’s “Punisher Task Force” to help bring Castle to justice, once and for all.

A facially mutilated Russoti recovers from his run-in with the Punisher with revenge on his mind and recruits a massive army of psychotic killers, gangbangers, and mobsters under his new alias “Jigsaw.”

Distraught that he has now become the very evil he swore to battle, Castle is content to hang up his guns and quit the justice business for good. However, plans quickly change once he learns that Jigsaw has kidnapped the surviving wife and child of the dead federal agent.

Forced back into the war, the Punisher now has to face off against Jigsaw’s formidable army in order to save the lives of an innocent family his actions put on firing line. “Clock’s ticking.”

Seems like we’ll never know the details of what happened behind the camera here, so we’ll treat the rumors of director Lexi Alexander (Green Street Hooligans) being booted from the project as uncorroborated reports that, while never denied by Lionsgate, aren’t exactly trustworthy. We can say that Alexander won the battle to keep her R-rated vision, though we’re not sure if she wanted the score to be comprised solely of heavy-metal thunder worthy of a WWE champion’s entrance music. Looking at what’s going on in front of the camera, we wish the new Frank Castle, Ray Stevenson (aka Titus from HBO’s “Rome”) all the best in his effort not to go the way of Thomas Jane once War Zone’s theatrical run is up (Jane said he didn’t work for a year after the original movie was released in 2004). Ditto co-star Dominic West, another HBO vet whose post-”Wire” career isn’t looking all that prosperous; perhaps Marvel can find a home for him in one of their myriad projects in development.

Rated R for pervasive strong brutal violence, language and some drug use.

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