Having turned the volume up to 11, however, that leaves more than 100 minutes to be filled with something, and so Robert Rodriguez and company have elected to do more of the
same,
stringing together bite - sized exploitation stand - bys — beheadings, gushing blood, machine - gun brassieres, beheadings, martial arts performed by clones, a ticking bomb sewn to a human
heart, beheadings, angry prostitutes, an undercover beauty queen, beheadings, Mexican jokes, Charlie Sheen as the U.S. President, Mel Gibson as a brilliant tech villain who claims he can see the future, and more beheadings — and pretending that the plot matters one iota.
On the one hand, it's entertaining to switch combat styles between Sora and Riku, who each have a different rhythm and spin on the traditional Kingdom
Hearts combat, but the order of levels is set up the
same for both characters, and there's no way to deviate from this
string of locales without the enemies being too strong.