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ActionScience FictionThriller

Replicant

- A ruthless killer... to destroy him, they had to create him.

Scientists create a genetic clone of a serial killer in order to help catch the killer, teaming up with two cops.

Release Date : 2001-05-11

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Artisan Entertainment777 Films CorporationMillennium Media

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Michael Rooker

Character Name : Jake

Original Name : Michael Rooker

Gender : Male

Jean-Claude Van Damme

Character Name : Replicant / Garrotte

Original Name : Jean-Claude Van Damme

Gender : Male

Ian Robison

Character Name : Reisman

Original Name : Ian Robison

Gender : Male

Catherine Dent

Character Name : Angie

Original Name : Catherine Dent

Gender : Female

Paul McGillion

Character Name : Captain

Original Name : Paul McGillion

Gender : Male

Pam Hyatt

Character Name : Mrs. Riley

Original Name : Pam Hyatt

Gender : Female

Margaret Ryan

Character Name : Gwendolyn

Original Name : Margaret Ryan

Gender : Male

James Hutson

Character Name : Snotty Concierge

Original Name : James Hutson

Gender : Male

Brandon James Olson

Character Name : Danny

Original Name : Brandon James Olson

Gender : Male

Peter Flemming

Character Name : Paul

Original Name : Peter Flemming

Gender : Male

Lillian Carlson

Character Name : Nurse

Original Name : Lillian Carlson

Gender : Female

Marnie Alton

Character Name : Hooker

Original Name : Marnie Alton

Gender : Female

April Telek

Character Name : Downtown Mother Victim

Original Name : April Telek

Gender : Female

Ingrid Tesch

Character Name : 911 Operator

Original Name : Ingrid Tesch

Gender : Female

Jayme Knox

Character Name : Wendy Wyckham

Original Name : Jayme Knox

Gender : Female

Fulvio Cecere

Character Name : Agent #1

Original Name : Fulvio Cecere

Gender : Male

Brent Chapman

Character Name : Janitor

Original Name : Brent Chapman

Gender : Male

Matteo Ferronato

Character Name : Downtown Home Infant

Original Name : Matteo Ferronato

Gender : Male

Dominic Ferronato

Character Name : Downtown Home Infant

Original Name : Dominic Ferronato

Gender : Male

Allan Gray

Character Name : Roarke

Original Name : Allan Gray

Gender : Male

Nick Swarts

Character Name : Jake (uncredited)

Original Name : Nick Swarts

Gender : Male

Claire Riley

Character Name : Penny Martin

Original Name : Claire Riley

Gender : Female

Lisa Ann Beley

Character Name : Terrified Neighbor

Original Name : Lisa Ann Beley

Gender : Female

Tracey Hway

Character Name : Reporter #2

Original Name : Tracey Hway

Gender : Female

Daryl Shuttleworth

Character Name : Uniform Foyer Cop

Original Name : Daryl Shuttleworth

Gender : Male

Biski Gugushe

Character Name : Loft Cop

Original Name : Biski Gugushe

Gender : Male

Hiro Kanagawa

Character Name : Lab Video Technician #1

Original Name : Hiro Kanagawa

Gender : Male

Alexander Pollock

Character Name : Young Garrotte

Original Name : Alexander Pollock

Gender : Male

Mark Brandon

Character Name : Reporter #1

Original Name : Mark Brandon

Gender : Male

Jenny McShane

Character Name : Woman with Red Car (uncredited)

Original Name : Jenny McShane

Gender : Female

Chris Kelly

Character Name : Chris

Original Name : Chris Kelly

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Double Trouble for Van Damme again! Yet another Jean-Claude Van Damme film that sees him tasked with playing two characters. In spite of its shaky reputation this isn’t half bad, it delivers what most Van Damme fans expect, namely bonkers fights and shifty science. Plot has Van Damme as a fire obsessed serial killer who is always one step ahead of the police. Enter science as a chance to clone the killer arises and this sets in motion the wheels of the Van Damme clone trying to come to terms with his alien world as he, and world weary police officer Jake Riley (Michael Rooker), set about capturing the unhinged mad man. It’s of course daft but it’s a whole bunch of fun, and with the strong presence of Rooker supplemented by two very interesting performances by Van Damme, pic is in good hands. The fight scenes are smoothly choreographed and exciting, with director Ringo Lam clearly aware of what makes a Van Damme movie work. It’s not prime Van Damme, but it’s above average and well worth checking out for those so inclined. 6/10

T

tmdb28039023

@tmdb28039023

2022-09-05

Jean-Claude Van Damme does the Italian neorealists one better; not only was he born to play himself, but also his twin — here, however, he mixes it up a bit, playing his clone instead. JCVD ​​is Edward 'The Torch' Garrotte, a serial killer who likes to burn the corpses of the women he murders (why they gave him that last name but don’t have him use an actual garrotte, I haven’t the foggiest), whom Detective Jake Riley (Michael Rooker) has unsuccessfully pursued for the past three years — up to and including his last day on the force before retiring to apparently take up boat repairing. It turns out to be a 10 Minute Retirement; a secret government agency has cloned Garrotte from DNA found at a crime scene, and needs Jake's help to babysit the clone while he tracks down the killer — except they don’t call it a clone, but a "replicant". The difference between one and the other is never satisfactorily explained, but as far as I can tell, it takes at least a week for a replicant to be up and about ("God created man in six days, we took longer;" actually, God created man on the sixth day, not in six days. No wonder it took your ignorant asses longer). Additionally, while a clone has to grow and mature, a replicant comes out fully formed (complete, if my eyes don’t deceive me, with a navel), just like Pallas Athena from Zeus’ forehead — but then this is business as usual for clones in the movies, so I don't understand why this one feels the need to make a point out of its not being a clone. Unless, of course, director Ringo Lam deliberately wants us to think of Blade Runner (it's never a good idea to remind the audience that they could be watching a much better film; only instead of seeing "attack ships blazing from Orion's shoulder" and "C-beams glowing in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate,” JCVD ​​eats dog food and falls in love with a whore. What’s certain is that the Replicant has the same muscular build as Garrotte; now, since a physique like JCVD's usually requires spending a lot in a gym — and time and a gym are two things that the Replicant lacks — I have no choice but to assume that Garrotte was born, like the baby in Meet the Spartans, with built-in muscles, a characteristic that his clone inherited (along with the uncontrollable desire to do splits). How do its creators intend for the Replicant to find Garrotte? “Well, we've augmented his telepathic ability by re-sequencing his genetic code from the genome. It may be our first, but genetic memory has been scientifically proven" — as has, I guess, telepathy, which is not the same thing; genetic memory would allow an individual to 'remember' something that they never learned (music, math), but the Replicator can recall specific actions performed by Garrotte. Anyway, the idea is for the Replicant to experience some sort of Proustian Madeleine moment, and it's Jake's job — who presumably knows Garotte as well as Steve Carell knows Proust in Little Miss Sunshine — to jog his memory. The rest is a disastrous hybrid of 48 Hrs. and Rain Man — the Replicant is basically a kid trapped in the body of a Belgian karate fighter (although come to think of it, so is the real JCVD) — that is neither good science fiction (the science, such as it is, being rather nebulous) nor good chopsocky (a character fighting himself invariably results in awkwardly choreographed action sequences). Then again, this movie was doomed they cast Michael 'Henry Lee Lucas' Rooker as the detective as opposed to the serial killer.