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District B13 - DVD Review
Cinema Blend DVD Reviews
Published on: 9/13/2006 10:58 PM
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District B13
 Buy.com Price: $14.52 
I used to have this recurring dream in which I'm being chased through various landscapes by a host of unseen adversaries. The venue might change - it could be a shopping mall, abandoned schoolhouse, or construction site , but in each case, I have the ability to leap staircases with a single bound, climb walls, and squeeze through the tightest spaces to evade capture. It's a liberating feeling and I always wake up disappointed to find that gravity still has a hold on me. David Belle and Cyril Raffaelli, the supremely gifted stars of the giddy French import District B13, have succeeded in bringing this dream to life with their open defiance of Sir Newton's laws. From one outlandishly staged fight and chase sequence to another, they wage war against an army of thugs across a dizzying array of rooftops and balconies with a combination of martial arts and gymnastics that is breathtaking to behold.

This is one of the first feature films to showcase the discipline known as 'parkour,' founded by Belle. With a focus on uninterrupted, efficient forward motion over and around obstacles, this extreme sport produces a balletic mixture of climbing, vaulting, and impossible leaps across urban landscapes, creating a new action film aesthetic that looks entirely unique. What's even more impressive is that 90% of the acrobatics were performed without the aid of wires, CGI, or any other special effects, adding a bone-crunching element of realism to some astonishing chop-socky moments. Mix in a thumping techno soundtrack and you've got yourself an eye-popping, pulse-pounding adrenaline fest timing in at a brisk 85 minutes.

I won't spend much time on the threadbare plot since it merely serves its purpose as filler between the action sequences. The film opens in an apartment in District B13, one of the forgotten walled-off Parisian slums where the government's neglect has allowed lawlessness to reign. The idealistic Leito (Belle) has decided to defy local kingpin Taha (Bibi Naceri, who co-wrote the screenplay with Besson) and his henchman K2 (the beefy Tony D'Amario) and rid his neighborhood of the scourge of drugs. A series of unfortunate events leads to Leito's sister Lola (Dany Verissimo) being kidnapped by Taha, and Leito landing in jail. Soon thereafter it's discovered that a 'clean' bomb capable of annihilating the entire city has fallen into Taha's hands, and wouldn't you know it, the darn thing's set to detonate in a matter of hours. Damien (Raffaelli), a renegade cop assigned to defuse the bomb, recruits the services of Leito, who knows the innermost details of Taha's organization, to save the day and retrieve little sis before it's too late.

What follows is the usual succession of captures and escapes, showdowns and countdowns, as the reluctant duo grow to trust one another and put aside their differences to bring down the villain. Belle and Raffaelli (a former stuntman who choreographed the rousing fight scenes) fare surprisingly well as novice actors, projecting enough charisma to keep us interested in those few quiet moments when they're not airborne. Naceri seems to be having a blast chewing the scenery as the coked-up Taha, even getting a chance to channel Pacino in a blatant Scarface homage. Dany Verissimo, who got her showbiz start in a less savory genre, is the very definition of gamine (let's just call her the Audrey Tautou of adult films). The script even takes a few potshots at France's current leadership, suggesting that recent events like last year's youth riots in Paris foretell an increasingly volatile situation that will only worsen if the government continues to turn a blind eye to the problem.

In the end, though, it's all window dressing for the expertly edited action sequences that comprise the heart of the film. Raffaelli dispatches a dozen or so baddies in a blistering casino battle that rivals the best work of Jackie Chan, Jet Li, or the apparent heir to the throne, Tony Jaa. David Belle becomes a Peter Pan/Spiderman hybrid as he scampers up walls and leaps over speeding cars, displaying a fluidity and economy of motion that will have you rewinding the scene to confirm what you just witnessed. Yes, the story's a bit silly and clichd, but you won't be able to take your eyes off the brutal ballet that sets District B13 apart from more traditional fare.


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