Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance

    Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance
    2011

    Synopsis

    When the devil resurfaces with aims to take over the world in human form, Johnny Blaze reluctantly comes out of hiding to transform into the flame-spewing supernatural hero Ghost Rider -- and rescue a 10-year-old boy from an unsavory end.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Nicolas CageJohnny Blaze / Ghost Rider
    • Fergus RiordanDanny
    • Violante PlacidoNadya
    • Ciarán HindsRoarke
    • Johnny WhitworthRay Carrigan
    • Idris ElbaMoreau
    • Spencer WildingGrannik
    • Sorin TofanKurdish
    • Jacek KomanTerrokov
    • Anthony Stewart HeadBenedict

    Recommendations

    • 50

      Boxoffice Magazine

      So it's a half-certainty, half-shock that Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance is both good and bad, a sequel that's hungry for thrills but bereft of the cohesiveness - and budget - to be a full meal.
    • 50

      Village Voice

      Cage-ophiles will find some delectable freakouts in Blaze's transformation - or near transformation - scenes. Otherwise, the committee-penned script combines yokel-friendly haw-haw irreverence (non-sequitur cutaways to the Rider pissing in a flamethrower pattern) and sweaty monologues about "controlling the Rider" (the character is basically a mean drunk's superhero).
    • 50

      New York Magazine (Vulture)

      Spirit of Vengeance is so focused and, as a result, so impoverished that you actually feel bad for Cage. The actor tries to bring the weird (though at this point one wonders if he can even do anything else) but the film more often than not leaves him high and dry, saddling him with standard-issue action hero lines and boilerplate action set-pieces.
    • 50

      Movieline

      The smugness of the film grows wearying long before the end. Just because the people on and behind the camera are willing to acknowledge what we're watching is ridiculous crap doesn't really change the fact that, well, it is.
    • 50

      Tampa Bay Times

      Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance offers Cage plenty of opportunities to tap his inner circus geek, to twitch, cackle and flail without shame, going full tilt batwing crazy. Not since he danced in a pagan bear suit in The Wicker Man has Cage appeared this unconcerned about what the audience will think.
    • 40

      Empire

      Like "Ghost Rider: Low Voltage," this is a surprisingly underpowered excursion into Marvel's mad world by Neveldine and Taylor. More purgatory than hellfire.
    • 40

      The Hollywood Reporter

      A water-treading sequel offering just enough kooky color to keep less-discerning funnybook fans occupied, Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance nudges its obscure hero's mythology forward a bit without seeming to care much how it gets there.
    • 33

      Entertainment Weekly

      Most of the movie's action-horror set pieces play like lame Gwar music video outtakes, and Cage's signature mix of irony and off-the-rails mugging only works when you can see the actor's face. In Ghost Rider form, his character is just a skeletal automaton with neither a tongue nor a cheek to put it in.

    Seen by

    • Inari Ōkami
    • Dahlia
    • Unreasonable
    • tangerine