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Freejack (Geoff Murphy, 1992)

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nWe’ve all been there. You’re staring at your twenty year-old girlfriend, when all of a sudden, this kooky thought trickles through your mind: Why can’t my twenty year-old girlfriend be a sexy woman pushing forty? I’m no math whiz, but you’re going to have wait fifteen maybe twenty years for that to happen. But what if I told you there was a way speed up the milfication of your twenty year-old girlfriend? All you have to do is become a race car driver in, let’s say, 1991, and hope Mick Jagger and Esai Morales decide to zap your body to 2009 just before the car you’re driving explodes into a million pieces during a big race. Sure, your twenty year-old girlfriend in 1991 is going to be upset that you died and junk. But your thirty-nine year-old girlfriend in 2009 is going to be… freaked out when she learns that her dead boyfriend from 1991 is still alive. Okay, the plan isn’t perfect, but that’s the beauty of Freejack. It wants to be the Blade Runner of the ’90s, but it unwittingly becomes the ultimate ode to insta-milfing. You see, while your girlfriend has slowly been aging for the past eighteen years, you haven’t aged one bit. Meaning, you can rub your taut twenty year-old cock all over her fine thirty-nine year-old vagina. Well, in theory you can. Convincing a twenty year-old Rene Russo, who seems to channeling Drew Barrymore, to rub the shaft containing your organic tautness all over the bean-sized squishy lumps that pepper her not even close to being weather-beaten vulva is pretty much the epitome of easy-peasy-lemon-squeezy. However, managing to persuade a thirty-nine year-old Rene Russo, one who is now a sophisticated executive with a wardrobe to match, to do is same is going to be difficult.

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nHow difficult, you ask? Well, the makers of Freejack try to answer that question by showing the lengths a hot shot rookie race car driver named Alex Furlong (Emilio Estevez) will go to get a delicious piece of mature pussy. I know, you’re thinking to yourself: That’s a pretty crass way to describe Rene Russo. But I can’t think of a less vulgar way to put it.

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nIn a way, Rene Russo should be flattered that Alex Furlong is so eager to enter her fully-developed lady-hole. In the majority of movies that explore the insta-milf phenomenon, the man usually dumps the older woman for someone younger. But not here. Uh-uh. Alex Furlong risks his life multiple times to get with the sexually attractive older woman of his dreams.

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nOf course, the reason Alex Furlong has to risk his life in order to hook up with Julie Redlund (Rene Russo) has nothing to do with society’s reluctance to accept relationships that involve young men dating older women, but everything to do with Mick Jagger and Esai Morales wanting to use his body for reasons that are a tad complicated.

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nActually, they’re not that complicated. In the future, certain people on the verge of death can transport their mind into the mind of a healthy body. I know, why go through the trouble of snatching the bodies of race car drivers from the early 1990s just as they’re about to die in a horrific car crash? Well, the reason the individual Mick Jagger and Esai Morales work for, McCandless (Anthony Hopkins), the CEO of McCandless Corp., wants this particular body is personal/convoluted. But it makes sense overall, as the bulk of today’s society are too sickly to transport one’s mind to.

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nIt’s like that movie Millennium. Only, instead of transporting an entire doomed airliner’s worth people into the future, they transport one person. And that person is called a “freejack.” Unfortunately for McCandless, his freejack manages to escape moments after being transported from 1991 to 2009.

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nAfter a narrow escape, Alex Furlong sets about finding his milfy prize. That is, of course, if she’s still alive. I mean, the 2009 version of New York City looks a tad on the bleak side.
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nHelped by a shotgun-wielding, internet surfing nun (Amanda Plummer), Alex is sent to Park Slope, Brooklyn, where his agent from ’91 (David Johansen) apparently now lives. Despite the constant raging gun battles in the street, Alex manages to find his agent and is well on his way to reuniting with Julie. All he has to do is not get caught by Mick Jagger’s Vacendak, and his band of armored car driving, helmet-wearing laser-rifle-packing goons.

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nEven though it sounded like I was joking about Rene Russo channeling Drew Barrymore, I’m actually dead serious. Since the bulk of the film’s budget went to designing those futuristic bubble cars and paying the steep rental fees for the fleet of armored cars used in this movie, there wasn’t anything left over to cover the cost of making Rene Russo seem believable as a twenty year-old. Well, after watching Drew Barrymore in Poison Ivy, Rene Russo decided right then and there that her (Saturn Award winning) performance in the early going of Freejack would be based on Drew Barrymore (watch her eyes, they’re so Drew). It’s true, I still didn’t buy that Rene Russo looked twenty. But she did act the part, I’ll give her that.

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nAs for Emilio Estevez… Since he stays the same age from start to finish, no make-up is necessary to make him seem older. Nevertheless, he brings nothing of note to the film. Personally, I would have cast Christian Slater or James Spader as Alex Furlong.

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nMy opinion as far Mick Jagger goes seems to change from day-to-day. One minute I’m like: Can you believe Mick Jagger is in this movie?!? And the next minute I’m like: Can you believe Mick Jagger in this movie?!? Wait, that’s the same exact thing I said about the first minute. Either way, the sound of Mick’s unique accent uttering lines like, “Get the meat!” and “Who’s firing hard ammo?” was quite something. But like I said, I can’t really decide if it’s a good thing or a bad thing. I will say this, I did let out a mild giggle every time they would show Mick Jagger wearing his helmet (safety first).

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nWhen we do eventually meet Rene Russo in 2009, she’s so chic it hurts. And, yes, her legs are usually adorned with hosiery. What kind exactly, I’m not entirely sure. But they were typically jet black and worn with long, slit-friendly skirts.

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nNow working for the McCandless Corp., Rene Russo has no idea that her boss (Anthony Hopkins) is planning on bringing her dead boyfriend from 1991 to 2009. If I was her, I would be flattered by the amount effort both McCandless and Alex Furlong go through to be with her.

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nIf you think about it, the whole thing is freakin’ romantic. Of course, Rene Russo doesn’t see it this way. At least not right away. And because of this, Alex Furlong must jump through even more hoops to claim his milfy prize. And by “hoops,” I mean, car chases, laser gun battles, and, not to mention, defeat a more conniving than usual Jonathan Banks (he plays an evil McCandless employee named Michelette). Just for the record: When it comes to being an asshole twenty-five years ago, no-one can top Jonathan Banks.

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nAnyway, it’s a good thing Alex Furlong’s “milfy prize” looks like Rene Russo, as I wouldn’t have bought the film’s premise (twenty year-old race car driver jumps through multiple hoops to hook up with a thirty-seven year-old executive) had the so-called “milfy prize” been someone who lacked milf-appeal. And Rene Russo… (Has milf-appeal?) Yeah. She does.

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nOn the other hand, I didn’t buy that nightclub’s in 2009 would be playing Jesus Jones. Remember them? They were briefly popular back in 1991. Hell, the film can’t even get 1992 right, as the use of a Scorpions song over the closing credits seems dated. Though, to be fair, hardly anyone predicted that grunge would take off the way it did at around the time of this film’s release.

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nOh, and keep an eye out for Jerry Hall as a newswoman (she appears during the nightclub scene) and Grand L. Bush as “Boone” Rene Russo’s driver/body guard, who carries a TEC-9 and a samurai sword.

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See also  The King's Speech (2010)
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