The Chronicles of Riddick
The Chronicles of Riddick | |
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Directed by | David Twohy |
Written by | David Twohy |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Hugh Johnson |
Edited by |
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Music by | Graeme Revell |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 119 minutes 135 minutes (Director's cut) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $105[1]–120 million[2] |
Box office | $115.8 million[1] |
The Chronicles of Riddick is a 2004 American science fiction adventure film which follows the adventures of Richard B. Riddick as he attempts to elude capture after the events depicted in the 2000 film Pitch Black. It is written and directed by Pitch Black director David Twohy, with Vin Diesel reprising his role as Riddick and now also acting as producer. It is the first and only film in the franchise, to date, to be given a PG-13 rating.
After escaping the dark planet, Richard B. Riddick has been in hiding for five years, evading most of the bounty hunters and mercenaries. Riddick is reunited with Imam, the man he rescued. Imam believes Riddick is a Furyan, a race of warriors long thought extinct, and wants to know about his homeworld and if anyone other than himself is left. Recaptured by Toombs, Riddick is taken to Crematoria, a harsh subterranean prison moon, where Jack, a girl Riddick rescued, was reported to have been sent.
Despite not doing especially well in theatres, the film has been successful on DVD and has gained a cult following. [citation needed]
Plot
Richard B. Riddick has been in hiding for five years, evading bounty hunters and mercenaries sent to capture him. After killing a crew led by Toombs and stealing his ship he heads to New Mecca in the Helion System, after Toombs reveals his bounty originated there. Riddick is reunited with Imam, the man previously rescued. Imam believes Riddick is a Furyan, a race of warriors long thought extinct, and wants to know about his homeworld and if anyone other than himself is left. Imam believes Helion Prime is the next planet to be conquered by a mysterious force crusading across the stars. Aereon, an Air Elemental, identifies the army as the Necromongers, religious fanatics who seek to convert everyone and kill those who refuse. The Necromongers attack, and take control of the capital in a single night. In the battle, Imam is killed and Riddick escapes.
The next day, the Necromonger high priest called 'The Purifier' coerces the populace into converting, except for Riddick, who kills the man who killed Imam. Intrigued, the Lord Marshal orders Riddick be scanned by the Quasi-Dead, half-dead telepaths, who determine that he is indeed a Furyan survivor. Lord Marshal orders Riddick's death, but Riddick escapes only to be recaptured by Toombs. Riddick is taken to Crematoria, a harsh subterranean prison moon, where Jack, a girl Riddick rescued, is also held.
The Lord Marshal sends Commander Vaako to hunt Riddick down. Vaako's wife speaks to Aereon, who reveals that Furya was devastated by the Lord Marshal after he was told a child from that planet would kill him. Dame Vaako and her husband determine Lord Marshal wants Riddick dead, as he may be the child of said prophecy. On Crematoria, a disagreement breaks out between Toombs and the prison warden over what Toombs is owed for Riddick's bounty. Word about the Necromongers has reached the prison warden, who deduces that Toombs has stolen a prisoner from the Necromongers. Meanwhile, in the prison, Riddick finds Jack, now named Kyra, and they eventually reconcile.
The guards kill the bounty hunters, take the reward money and prepare to leave before the Necromongers arrive. Riddick leads several prisoners across Crematoria's volcanic surface to steal the ship. The guards reach the hangar, just as the prisoners arrive to find the Necromongers have cornered them there. All of the guards are killed and Riddick is incapacitated by Vaako. With the approach of the vicious sunrise (from -300 to 700 degrees in seconds), Vaako leaves Riddick to die; Kyra is captured by the Necromongers.
However, Riddick is saved by the Purifier, who tells him that if he stays away from the Necromongers, the Lord Marshal promises not to hunt him. The Purifier then reveals that he too is a Furyan before committing suicide by walking out into the scorching heat after encouraging Riddick to kill the Lord Marshal. Meanwhile, Vaako reports Riddick dead and is named heir apparent by the Lord Marshal. Riddick flies back to Helion Prime using Toombs' spacecraft.
Riddick, infiltrates the main hall; Dame Vaako sees him, but encourages her husband not to warn the Lord Marshal, but to let Riddick strike first and pave the way for Vaako to kill the Lord Marshal and take his place as leader. When Riddick attacks, the Lord Marshal presents Kyra, who appears to have been converted. Riddick fights the Lord Marshal one-on-one in front of his army, who prevails with his supernatural powers. When it appears that Riddick is about to be killed, Kyra stabs the Lord Marshal in the back with a spear. The Lord Marshal responds by punching her into a column of spikes, mortally wounding her. Vaako attempts to strike the wounded Lord Marshal, but misses. The distraction however, provides Riddick with the opportunity to deliver a killing blow. The film ends with Kyra dying in Riddick's arms just before the Necromongers, including Vaako, kneel before Riddick as their new leader.
Cast
- Vin Diesel as Richard B. Riddick
- Colm Feore as Lord Marshal
- Thandie Newton as Dame Vaako
- Judi Dench as Aereon
- Karl Urban as Lord Vaako
- Alexa Davalos as Jack/Kyra
- Linus Roache as Purifier
- Yorick van Wageningen as The Guv
- Nick Chinlund as Alexander Toombs
- Keith David as Imam
- Kim Hawthorne as Lajjun
- Christina Cox as Eve Logan
- Alexis Llewellyn as Ziza
- Peter Williams as Convict
Release
There are three versions of the film: the theatrical cut, which was PG-13; the Director's Cut, which is unrated (both the first and the second are available on DVD); and the third version, a mix of the two assembled for television viewing, which has some, but not all, of the added footage from the Director's Cut. For instance, the minor subplot in the Director's Cut of Riddick's visions, as well as his moments with Toombs' second in command, are both absent, but the ending from the Director's Cut is present.
Critical reception
The theatrical version of The Chronicles of Riddick received mostly negative reviews from film critics, receiving a 29% Rotten rating with an average score of 4.6/10 on aggregate review site Rotten Tomatoes,[3] with the critical consensus "As an action movie, Riddick offers some thrills, but as a sequel to Pitch Black, it's a disappointment," and an average 38/100 score on Metacritic.[4]
For his performance in the film, Vin Diesel was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Actor at the 2004 Golden Raspberry Awards, but lost to George W. Bush for Fahrenheit 9/11.
Box office
Considering its production budget was reported to have been between $105 million[1] and $120 million[2] (which does not include marketing and distribution), the film was a box office disappointment. It grossed $57 million domestically, and its total worldwide gross stands between $107 million[2] and $115 million[1] depending upon sources; however, it was successful on DVD.[citation needed]
Sequel
Due to the successful home video sales on DVD, a sequel was made in 2013 called Riddick.
The film spun off books, an action figure line, animation and video games. The Xbox game The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay, later released for the PC, released simultaneously with the film was well received[5] as was the animated short film The Chronicles of Riddick: Dark Fury by Aeon Flux director Peter Chung.[citation needed]
The "unrated director's cut" DVD (featuring scenes which were cut in order to obtain a PG-13 rating) was released on November 16, 2004, and sold 1.5 million copies on the first day alone.[6] On April 7, 2009, a remake of the video game was included with the release of the game sequel The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena.
References
- ^ a b c d Box Office Mojo (Chronicles of Riddick box office data)
- ^ a b c The Numbers.com (Chronicles of Riddick box office data)
- ^ "The Chronicles of Riddick on Rotten Tomatoes". Retrieved 2008-12-17.
- ^ "The Chronicles of Riddick on Metacritic". Retrieved 2007-07-23.
- ^ Kasavin, Greg (December 10, 2004). "The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape From Butcher Bay - Developer's Cut". Gamespot.com. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
- ^ The MovieWeb Team (November 18, 2004). "Riddick runs with 1.5 million in day 1 sales". movieweb.com. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
External links
- Official website
- The Chronicles of Riddick at IMDb
- The Chronicles of Riddick at the TCM Movie Database
- The Chronicles of Riddick at AllMovie
- The Chronicles of Riddick at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- The Chronicles of Riddick at Box Office Mojo
- The Chronicles of Riddick at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Chronicles of Riddick at Metacritic
- 2004 films
- 2000s action films
- 2000s science fiction films
- American science fiction action films
- American films
- English-language films
- Films directed by David Twohy
- Films set in the 26th century
- Films shot in Vancouver
- Planetary romances
- American sequel films
- Space adventure films
- Universal Pictures films
- Films shot at Pinewood Studios
- The Chronicles of Riddick (franchise)
- One Race Films films
- Film scores by Graeme Revell
- Screenplays by David Twohy