


#Hell rider no1 movie#
(And you know how deals with the devil turn out.) The first movie ended with Johnny being let out of the bargain but choosing to keep his hell-born powers so that he could use them for good. In the previous “Ghost Rider” movie (and in the Marvel Comics that spawned it), stunt rider Johnny Blaze (Cage) became Satan’s errand boy as the result of a deal to save the life of Johnny’s dying father. This is a movie about a flaming skeleton that rides a motorcycle - there’s no excuse for it to be this dull.Īlso read: ‘Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance’ to Battle ‘Safe House’ for No. Sadly, the results of that collaboration are “Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance,” which sees Neveldine and Taylor succumbing to the Curse of Cage, rendering what might have been a gloriously loony concept into a fairly pedestrian supernatural action flick shot in some of the less attractive corners of budget-friendly Eastern Europe. If ever there was a match seemingly made in neo-grindhouse heaven, it would be a collaboration between directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, the guys behind the exhilaratingly all-bets-are-off “Crank” franchise, and actor Nicolas Cage, a man determined to star in as many ludicrous B-movies as possible in a quest to make every single Academy Award voter rue the day they ever gave him an Oscar.
