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''[['''Babylon A.D.]]''''' is a [[Cyberpunk]] action film based on the novel ''Babylon Babies'' by French (naturalised Canadian) sci-fi writer Maurice G. Dantec. In a near-future world divided by nationalistic and religious conflict, a mercenary called Toorop (played by [[Vin Diesel]]) is hired by a [[The Mafiya|Russian mobster]] to escort a woman {{spoiler|pregnant with genetically-enhanced twins}} to North America for delivery to the Neolites, a New Age sect. The woman's odd behaviour, and other strange events, cause Toorop to realise {{spoiler|that the babies she is carrying represent the next stage in human evolution.}}
 
As the film's development was hellish from A to Z, the final product bombed hard and was disavowed by its own director, Matthieu Kassovitz. A making-of called [http://www.erenumerique.fr/fucking_kassovitz_-article-1634-1.html Fucking Kassovitz] was released in 2011 to reveal the extent of the disaster behind the scenes.
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* [[Ascended Extra]]: Rebecca Waterman (an Israeli mercenary who's part of Toorop's team) becomes Sister Rebeka, Aurora's [[Parental Substitute]] and a [[Warrior Monk|martial arts-trained nun]].
* [[Astronomic Zoom]]: The movie begins with a zoom down to Earth's nightside through orbiting satellites, ending up on the New York street at the moment Toorop gets killed.
* [[Attack Drone|Attack Drones]]s patrol the Bering Strait, killing everything that moves whether wildlife or illegal infiltrators.
* [[Bait and Switch Gunshot]]: {{spoiler|Toorop is hit by fighter drones while escorting Aurora and Sister Rebeka across the Bering Strait. His 'friend' Finn decides to take Aurora for himself, believing she's a priceless viral weapon. When Sister Rebeka objects he says matter-of-factly: "You, I don't need." A shot then rings out...and Finn falls dead, revealing the [[Not Quite Dead]] Toorop holding a pistol. The scene works well because Rebeka is not a main character, and thus more likely to get shot.}}
* [[Beast and Beauty]]: The bare-knuckle brawler in the refugee camp is instantly smitten with Aurora and tries to protect her from kidnappers.
* [[Bodyguard Crush]]: At first Toorop treats Aurora as [[The Load]]; by the time they get to Canada there's noticeable [[UST]] between them.
* [[Car Chase]]: The chase scene between [[Van in Black|Neolite Range Rovers]] and the Hummers, shown in the cinemas and available as a deleted scene on DVD.
* [[Checkpoint Charlie]]: The protagonists must cross the Bering Strait via submarine and snowbike, while avoiding [[Attack Drone|Attack Drones]]s.
* [[Coincidental Broadcast]]: Used more judiciously than usual. There's an entire wall showing dozens of channels, which makes it easier to accept if at least one of the channels is showing something relevant.
* [[Convection, Schmonvection]]: In slow motion, during the New York shoot out, Aurora and Sister Rebekah have a missile pass ''not more than a foot'' in front of their faces. This should not be pleasant.
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* [[Creator Backlash]]: ''Babylon A.D.'' was hit with this before it even came out. The director, Matthieu Kassovitz, has been quite open about how his initial vision of a dark but thoughtful cyberpunk world was [[Executive Meddling|edited beyond all recognition]] and turned into "a bad episode of ''[[24]]''." (For context, [[Rotten Tomatoes]] rates this movie at 7% freshness.)
* [[Crapsack World]]
* [[Cyborg]]: Toorop's right arm and left leg are replaced with cybernetics {{spoiler|to undo the damage of being dead for over two hours.}} This apparently gives him enhanced strength -- Whenstrength—When Toorop grabs his shoulder Darquandier winces, and he kicks open a chained metal door during the Hummer chase. Darquandier is also a cyborg as he was [[Genius Cripple|crippled by a carbomb]].
* [[Death by Adaptation]]: {{spoiler|Darquandier.}}
* [[Doesn't Like Guns]]: Sister Rebeka turns down the gun Toorop offers her, but doesn't hesitate to grab one in New York. {{spoiler|Subverted with Aurora, who's the last person you'd expect to use a gun until she threatens them on the submarine and later shoots Toorop in New York.}}
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* [[The Ophelia]]: Aurora has touches of this, though she's not mad. She does gets hysterical when she has visions, but that's because what she's seeing is not pretty.
* [[Parental Substitute]]: Aurora has several of these; Rebeka who raised her in the convert, while Darquandier and the High Priestess both refer to Aurora as their daughter and act [[Like an Old Married Couple]] who've undergone a nasty divorce.
* [[Person of Mass Destruction]]: Aurora in ''Babylon A.D.'' is believed to be a viral weapon at first. In "Babylon Babies" another woman is used in this fashion -- whenfashion—when she comes into proximity with the pheromones of her target, her body rapidly [[Rapid Aging|creates a virus that kills several hundred people in minutes]], wiping out the upper echelons of the Neolite sect.
* [[Post Mortem One Liner]]: In the novel Toorop chants a sura from the Koran after he kills two border guards.
* [[Product Placement]]: An airliner with a Coke Zero ad painted across its entire surface. The [[Big Applesauce]] is also full of advertising, some of it related to the plot, others for products well known to the audience.
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