The Rundown (known internationally as Welcome to the Jungle) is a 2003 American action comedy film directed by Peter Berg and written by James Vanderbilt and R.J. Stewart from a story by Stewart. It follows an aspiring chef working as a debt collector for a loan shark who is tasked with retrieving the loan shark's son, who went to Brazil to search for a lost artifact. The film stars Dwayne Johnson,[a]Seann William Scott, Christopher Walken and Rosario Dawson.
Beck is an aspiring chef who works as a debt collector for loan shark and bookie Billy Walker. He is sent to a nightclub to retrieve a championship ring from a football player, during which he is assaulted by one of Billy's other collectors. Angry, he tells Billy that he wants out of the business. Billy convinces him to undertake one final job: retrieve Billy's son Travis from a small mining town in Brazil, for which Beck will be given enough money to open his own restaurant. He accepts and leaves for Brazil.
Arriving in the town of El Dorado, Beck meets Cornelius Hatcher, who runs the town's mining operation. Cornelius gives Beck his blessing to take Travis home, but reneges after he finds out Travis has discovered a lost golden artifact known as O Gato do Diablo (the Devil's Cat). Cornelius and his men confront Beck in the local bar, but he manages to fend them off and leave with Travis. On the way back to the airfield, Travis forces the pair's Jeep off the road and into the jungle. He attempts to escape but is recaptured by Beck. After an unfortunate encounter with some monkeys, the two find themselves in the camp of a local rebel movement.
Travis convinces the rebels that Beck works for Cornelius and was sent to kill them all. Beck gains the upper hand in the ensuing fight before the rebel leader Mariana, whom Beck met earlier at the bar, intervenes. She wants the Gato so it can be used to ensure the locals can free themselves from Cornelius, but Cornelius and his men suddenly attack the camp and kill many rebels. Beck, Travis, and Mariana escape the camp and Beck makes Mariana a deal: she helps him get Travis to the airfield in exchange for the Gato. After some searching, Travis leads them to a cave behind a waterfall where the Gato is located. They retrieve it and begin the journey back.
On the way back, Mariana chastises Travis for wanting to sell the artifact, but he argues that he actually wants to give it to a museum. She gives Beck and Travis a toxic fruit that temporarily paralyzes them, tells Beck which direction the airfield is, and leaves them with a campfire to keep the animals away. After regaining the ability to move, Beck hauls Travis to the airfield. The local pilot, Declan, tells Beck that Mariana was captured earlier by Cornelius and will probably be killed. Travis pleads with Beck to help her and the two head into town to rescue her.
Using a cow stampede for cover, Beck and Travis begin their assault on Cornelius's men. Travis becomes trapped by gunfire in a bus, and Beck saves him before it explodes. Cornelius tells his brother Harvey to flee with Mariana and the Gato, but they are stopped by Travis. Cornelius confronts Beck, who offers him the chance to leave town, which Cornelius refuses. After he is shot by the townspeople, he agrees to leave town, but eventually dies from his wounds. Travis gives the Gato to Mariana before leaving with Beck, who tells him that he must still return Travis to the United States despite all they have been through together.
Back in Los Angeles, Travis is delivered to Billy, who verbally and physically abuses him. Beck asks to celebrate with them and gives Billy and his men the same fruit Mariana used on him and Travis. As everyone else is temporarily paralyzed, Beck uncuffs Travis and the two leave together.
Cast
Dwayne Johnson as Beck, a skilled bounty hunter who longs to quit the business and start a career as a chef
Seann William Scott as Travis Walker, a treasure hunter who is searching El Dorado for a lost artifact
Christopher Walken as Cornelius Bernard Hatcher, the owner of the mining operation and founder of the town of El Dorado
Rosario Dawson as Mariana, the town bartender who is also the secret leader of the local resistance against Cornelius
Ewen Bremner as Declan, the Irish pilot who operates out of the town airstrip
Jon Gries as Harvey Hatcher, Cornelius' younger brother and co-owner of the mine
Ernie Reyes Jr. as Manito, a resistance fighter who engages Beck in a prolonged fight using his skill in capoeira
William Lucking as Billy Walker, Travis's father, a loan shark and bookie who uses Beck to collect debts
The movie was originally called Helldorado. It was offered to director Peter Berg, who had only made one film, Very Bad Things. Looking for inspiration on how to do it, Berg bought a DVD titled The 50 Best Fights Ever Filmed, which at first demotivated him: "I just thought, 'Good God, it's all been done and it's all been done so well, probably with more money than I'm going to have. What am I going to do?'" He then saw the fight between Roddy Piper and Keith David in They Live, about which he said, "It just hurt watching it. It was a completely different style from all these sexy and sleek movies. And thinking about it, I couldn't remember the last time in a movie fight where I felt the pain, where if you got hit in the face, it hurt. So that's where I found my breathing room: let's give people old-school guys slugging it out with big punches."[4] Producer Kevin Misher described the film as "Indiana Jones and the Lost Ark meets Romancing the Stone with a little bit of Midnight Run".[5]
Dwayne Johnson, who was credited under his ring name The Rock, was paid $12.5 million for his role. Berg said of his performance, "This movie could have been a dark, vicious action thriller. But the fact that it's playful and funny is a tribute to The Rock. He's a charming, charismatic and very smart man."[6]
Berg and Misher were held up by armed robbers in Brazil in June 2002 while scouting locations,[7] prompting them to film in Hawaii instead. Shooting began in September 2002, with Seann William Scott later stating "we just basically made up as we went along".[4] One scene on Oahu involved Johnson and Scott falling down the side of a mountain. Berg said, "The goal was to put the biggest fall down a hill in a movie that people have ever seen. The big inspiration was the old Wide World of Sports—'and the agony of defeat'—and wondering what would have happened if that poor bastard on the ski slope had had a few more stages to go." Johnson's regular stuntman refused to do the stunt, so they hired "a guy who has a reputation for just doing anything" who was knocked out the first time.[4]
Arnold Schwarzenegger has a cameo in the film. He visited Universal Studios during the shoot and was having lunch with Johnson when Berg asked if he would like to appear in the film, and Schwarzenegger agreed if they could do it immediately.[8] His cameo as a bar patron who passes by Johnson's character and simply tells him to "have fun" is widely regarded as a veiled reference to the fact that Johnson's career as a Hollywood action star was just beginning as Schwarzenegger's was winding down.[9]
Reception
Box office
Despite the positive reviews, The Rundown was a significant box office failure, grossing just under $81 million worldwide compared to its $85 million budget,[3] which makes a sequel 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."[10]
Critical response
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, The Rundown holds an approval rating of 70% based on 152 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The website's critical consensus states, "The Rundown doesn't break any new ground, but it's a smart, funny buddy action picture with terrific comic chemistry between Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Seann William Scott."[11] At Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 59 out of 100 based on 36 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[12]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 31⁄2 stars out of 4, saying "The jungle locations give the film a texture and beauty that underlines the out-sized characters."[13]
Possible sequel
In December 2009, Berg acknowledged that discussions for a sequel had begun shortly after the film's release and were still ongoing. He cited scheduling conflicts as to why the project had not yet been green-lit.[14] Johnson corroborated this in November 2010, stating that he and Berg "are always discussing options" for a sequel; he said that the pair are also in negotiations with Universal Pictures, and expressed confidence that the sequel will be made if a good enough script is written.[15]
Berg announced in December 2013 that he was officially developing a sequel, confirming that Johnson was still interested while Scott would not return. A number of undisclosed screenwriters were hired for the project.[16][17][18] By September 2016, Berg stated that the sequel had been written with Kevin Hart in mind as the co-star due to his recent work as Johnson's co-star in multiple successful films, while also stating that he would alternatively consider making the film with Jonah Hill in the role. Johnson publicly confirmed his involvement with the project while proposing HellDorado (the first film's working title) as a possible title. The pair asked fans to campaign for Hill to sign on as his co-star.[19][20][21][22]
In August 2018, Berg revealed that the current draft of the script included a story that took place in Alaska with a comedic scene involving walruses, similar to the scene with baboons from the first movie. Acknowledging that Johnson had expressed disinterest in Alaska, Berg stated that a new draft is being written with a less frigid location.[23] Berg said in September 2020 that development for a sequel is ongoing, citing Johnson's busy production schedule as one of the reasons it has not yet been made and admitting that they are currently "rethink[ing] the script".[24][25]
^ abcWhipp, Glenn (September 26, 2003). "Peter Berg wants you to feel their pain: [HOME Edition]". Los Angeles Times. p. K12.
^Ryan, Tim (October 22, 2002). "ROCK 'n' roll 'em: In spite of a little bloodshed, all's heavenly on the set of the film formerly known as 'Helldorado'". Honolulu Star.