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In a post-apocalyptic wasteland, a battle-hardened mercenary, Toorop, lives by his own code and the credo kill or be killed. When he takes the high-risk job of escorting a woman from Russia to American, he does not know that she is host to an organism that a cult wants to harvest in order to produce a genetically modified Messiah.
To put it bluntly, Babylon A.D. is a cluttered mess. Characters have been under developed, realtionships have no chemistry, and its conclusion feels rushed and leaves too many unresolved questions.
With his face like a squashed doughnut, and physique like the tyres of a huge truck, Diesel just doesn't inhabit the same planet as Rampling or even Kassovitz himself.
The movie has a nice look -- gray, rusted metal exposed to Siberian and Bering Strait snow. What it lacks is coherence and a compelling reason for us to take this often-abrupt journey with Aurora, Toorop and Sister Rebeka.