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JOHNSON SURVIVES THE RUBBLE THAT IS RAMPAGE

- Review: Jake Coyle AP Film Writer Images: Warner Bros. via AP

Usually paired with smaller companions like Kevin Hart or Moana, Dwayne Johnson is for once the diminutive one in "Rampage," a hopelessly bland and bizarrely self-serious monster movie. Johnson plays primatolog­ist Davis Okoye in Brad Petyon's adaption of a classic 1986 arcade game. Naturally, Okoye has some covert military history but — like so many highly trained internatio­nal commandos — he's now working at the San Diego Zoo. His time is especially focused on a hulking albino gorilla named George. They are pals, Davis and George, who fist-bump and play pranks on one another.

The two are actually a winning pair, but "Rampage," unfortunat­ely, isn't the Rock- and-monkey buddy comedy ("The Guerrilla and the Gorilla"?) we might crave. "Rampage" is profession­al-looking, thanks to the wellintegr­ated effects artistry of Weta Digital. We have become spoiled, perhaps, by affecting computer-generated primates thanks to the "Planet of the Apes" franchise. But George (played with motion capture by Jason Liles) still holds his own in the monkey-movie kingdom.

And Johnson, so recently in the jungle for "Jumanji," remains a truly indefatiga­ble movie star capable of carrying even the most half-baked of premises with colossal charisma. "Rampage" would surely sink a less sturdy action star, yet even here the wayward mishmash of monster-movie tropes only seem to ping off him like bullets deflected by

Superman.

The objective of the original 8-bit video game was to, while controllin­g one of three giant monsters (a gorilla, dinosaur or werewolf ), reduce a city to rubble. Naturally, a story of such pathos and originalit­y brought Hollywood rushing with a check for millions.

What the film's writers — Ryan Engle, Carlton Cuse, Ryan J. Condal, Adam Sztykiel — have come up with from this skeletal concept is something overly elaborate and curiously humorless. The film opens ominously in space, where a genetic experiment has created a giant mutated rat that chews up the space station's crew, but not before an escape pod with three samples shoots back to Earth.

The canisters of serum land alongside an alligator in the Florida Everglades, a wolf in Wyoming and at George's habitat in San Diego. Each quickly swells massively while simultaneo­usly becoming increasing­ly aggressive. (With a slightly different trajectory, we might have gotten a more unpredicta­ble mutant trio like maybe a cockatoo, a koala and Keith Olbermann. Now that would be interestin­g.)

The company behind the trials tries to quietly recapture the lab results. Malin Akerman, the fine actress of "Billions," plays its ruthless chief executive, alongside her more clueless brother, played by Jake Lacy. Meanwhile, a consortium of military and government agencies try and fail to capture or kill the beasts as they converge on Chicago. Naomie Harris plays a genetic engineer.

But the only performanc­e really of note in "Rampage" is by Jeffrey Dean Morgan, who plays an agent for an unnamed government agency with wild-eyed, cowboy abandon. The scenery might be digital, but that doesn't stop him from trying to chew it all.

As a product that reunites the director and star of "San Andreas" and "Journey 2: The Mysterious Island," ''Rampage" is similarly forgettabl­e popcorn fare that, in almost every scene feels like a knockoff of something else. And it should be funny. Movies about giant mutant animals that flock to the Windy City really ought to be funny. Morgan seems to be the only one to realize that in monster camp like this, go big or go home.

 ??  ?? Dwayne Johnson in a scene from "Rampage."
Dwayne Johnson in a scene from "Rampage."
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 ??  ?? Jeffrey Dean Morgan
Jeffrey Dean Morgan

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