The Rundown (also known as
Welcome to the Jungle) is a
2003 action
comedy film starring
Dwayne
Johnson and
Seann William
Scott about a
bounty hunter who
must head for Brazil to retrieve his employer's renegade son. It
was directed by
Peter Berg.
Plot
Beck (
Dwayne Johnson) is a
professional bounty hunter or retrieval expert who chooses not to
use guns in his work due to a previous bad experience. He is hired
by his boss, Billy Walker, to go to get Walker's son, Travis
(Scott), from the Amazon jungle. Beck wants out of the business,
and Walker agrees to make this his last job before Beck retires and
opens his own restaurant. He heads down to the small South American
town of "El Dorado" (also called Helldorado) to find Travis and
retrieve him from the mess he is in. The town is essentially owned
by Hatcher (Walken), and people there have no choice but to work
for him due to his monopoly of virtually all commerce.
Beck quickly captures Travis, but Travis escapes with the help of
Hatcher. Travis is looking for an ancient golden artifact known as
the
Gato (Cat in english) that, if the townspeople
acquired it, would allow them to buy their freedom from Hatcher,
which is why Hatcher wants the Gato and wants Travis free to find
it for him. Travis flees into the jungle but is again captured by
Beck, and after Travis fails to talk his way out of capture, they
in turn run afoul of a group of rebels led by Mariana (Dawson), a
town clerk with whom Travis is infatuated. Beck agrees to let
Travis find the Gato for Mariana before he takes him home, and with
the assistance of the rebels, the three find the location of the
Gato and retrieve it. That night Hatcher and his men find the rebel
camp and kill all the rebels save for Travis, Beck, and Mariana.
Travis is eager to donate the artifact to a museum despite his
greedy tendencies, but Mariana incapacitates Travis and Beck with a
toxic, hallucinogenic fruit called Konlabos and takes it, unwilling
to allow Travis to keep it.
In the morning, Beck returns to the airstrip to take Travis home,
but finds out that Mariana has been captured by Hatcher. Reluctant
to leave after his agreement with Mariana, Beck returns to town
with Travis. After learning of Beck's return, Hatcher locks down
the town and sends his men out to kill him. After being bested by
Hatcher's gunmen, Beck reluctantly takes up guns and reveals
himself as a skilled marksman, effortlessly dispatching Hatcher's
men and freeing Mariana. Hatcher confronts Beck amidst the
townspeople and is shot when he attempts to attack Mariana.
Agreeing to leave the town, Hatcher attempts to walk away but
collapses dead. Beck and Travis return to Walker while Mariana and
the townspeople are left the Gato. With Walker, Beck watches as he
is paid and Travis is hit and ridiculed by his father. As a sort of
toast to his last job, Beck feeds Walker and his men the same
fictional toxic fruit that Mariana fed to him, and they collapse in
paralysis as an overjoyed Travis leaves with Beck, grateful but
still irritating him. The film ends with Beck muttering "I'm gonna
kill you" after Travis fakes a punch at him.
Cast
Reception
The Rundown was warmly received by both critics and
moviegoers. The film holds a "fresh" 71% on
Rotten Tomatoes. This was the first WWE Film
to ever be able to be produced outside of production.
Roger Ebert gave the film 3 1/2 stars
out of 4, saying "The jungle locations give the film a texture and
beauty that underlines the outsized characters."
Despite the positive acclaim, the modest box office take for the
film makes a sequel possible but not entirely likely. Director
Peter Berg has expressed interest in making a sequel to the film
but notes that "no one can ever get motivated and focused enough to
do it."
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Production Notes
- The film's working titles were Helldorado and
Welcome to the Jungle, both of which are referenced in the
film. After arriving in the Amazon, Beck passes a sign that reads
"Helldorado", and in the jungle, Travis says "Welcome to the
jungle!" It kept the title Welcome to the
Jungle in some territories, such as India
, the
United
Kingdom
, Denmark
, Sweden
, South Korea
, Norway
, Belgium
, Germany
, Switzerland
, Austria
, France
(as
Bienvenue dans la jungle), Australia, New Zealand
, India
, Hong Kong
, Brazil
(as Bem
Vindo à Selva) and Poland
(as
Witajcie w Dżungli). In Mexico and Spain, the film
is known as El Tesoro del Amazonas ("The Treasure of the
Amazon") and in Russia as Сокровища Амазонки ("The
Treasures of the Amazon").
- The
film was planned to be shot in the Amazon, but after the crew got
robbed in the jungle, they decided to shoot it in Hawaii
instead.
- The football clips shown when Beck is describing the offensive
linemen in the club are not NFL clips, but
rather clips from Vince McMahon's
XFL.
- Arnold Schwarzenegger
makes a cameo at the start of the film. The Rock's character is
walking into a nightclub about to confront a group of professional
football players. Schwarzenegger passes by and says to The Rock,
"Have fun". Schwarzenegger was campaigning in the California
gubernatorial election during the filming of the film.
- During the fight with the football players, The Rock delivers a
Rock Bottom to one of the
players, his finishing move as a wrestler.
- The name of the fish Beck calls a "penis-eating minnow" is the
candirú.
- Baboons are Old World monkeys
and are native to Africa, not the Amazon.
- The poem "Do
not go gentle into that good night" is referenced multiple
times, both quoted by Declan and by the tattoos on the insides of
Beck's arms.
- Recently The Rock's character "Beck" was named 6 out of 10 best
movie bounty hunters by Empire
Magazine.
- There are six references to the films of Akira Kurosawa in the film, but they are very
subtly done.
- A special feature on the DVD is called "Appetite for
Destruction". Guns N' Roses' debut
album Appetite for
Destruction features the song "Welcome to the Jungle", the
original title of the film.
- Declan enters into the town while playing a Scottish tune
called "Highland Laddie". When it shows him strike up again, his
fingers are not in sync with the playing or in any actual note
position.
- The film was originally shot and conceived with an "R" rating
in mind. Most original scenes (i.e., the shootings, the beatings,
etc.) were at first bloodier and more brutal. It was then decided
to cut the film back to PG-13 for more commercial reasons. It is
unknown if an unrated version will ever be released.
- A continuity error occurs
during the final fight scene. Beck has two cuts on his shirt in the
upper right corner, but after he is seen walking away from an
explosion the rips are on the left side.
References
- Konlobos as fictional fruit, based on hand
pears
External links