Entertainment

Rampage: Not even The Rock's natural charisma can rescue this brute

George the giant ape on the rampage in Rampage
George the giant ape on the rampage in Rampage George the giant ape on the rampage in Rampage

IF ANY proof were needed of humanity's hubris, look no further than Rampage. Hundreds of men and women, including four scriptwriters and an army of special effects wizards, invested thousands of hours of sweat and tears in this outlandish action-packed fantasy adventure based on a popular 1980s video game.

The result is a chest-beating behemoth of a blockbuster with no soul, wit, warmth or sincerity, which lumbers from the risible to the yawn-inducingly improbable without pausing for breath for such basic concerns as logic, characterisation or emotional depth.

The ineptitude of Brad Peyton's film is remarkable, with its clumsy dialogue and ham-fisted attempts to create a touching bond between muscular lead Dwayne Johnson and a digitally rendered ape.

Rampage the video game was a mindless and entertaining exercise in wanton destruction. The big screen adaptation lacks even this vicarious thrill as we watch a genetically edited gorilla, wolf and American crocodile tumble skyscrapers like dominos.

Johnson plays former Special Forces operative turned primatologist Davis Okoye, who is based at a wildlife sanctuary. Davis has raised an albino silverback gorilla called George since the ape's mother was slaughtered by poachers and the creature trusts him implicitly, communicating using basic sign language.

Canisters of a serum engineered by Energyne Industries, controlled by scheming minx Claire Wyden (Malin Akerman) and her goofy brother Brett (Jake Lacy), fall to Earth from the exploding Athena-1 space station laboratory.George is infected and the normally mild-mannered ape develops heightened aggression as he rapidly increases in size.

Discredited genetic engineer Dr Kate Caldwell (Naomie Harris) pledges to help Davis discover a cure before George is deemed a risk to human life and has to be destroyed.

Rampage opens in deep space with a competently orchestrated evacuation of the Energyne space station that recalls the sci-fi horrors Life and Alien. Once the narrative re-enters Earth's atmosphere in a fireball of special effects, Peyton's film goes up in smoke.

For the first time, Johnson's natural charisma fails to atone for the sins of a ham-fisted script and his on-screen romance with Harris' ballsy woman of science is inert.

"Thanks for saving the world," coos one character.

Thanks for nothing.

RAMPAGE (12A, 107 mins) Action/Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Adventure/Romance. Dwayne Johnson, Naomie Harris, Malin Akerman, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Jake Lacy. Director: Brad Peyton

RATING: 3/10