One of the taglines to the film “The Sixth Day” is “You’ve Cloned the Wrong Man.” They sure have, but a better tagline for the film would be “You’ve Just Wasted Seven Bucks.”This Friday when the film “The Sixth Day” opens up, do yourself a favor and try not to see this movie.Although Arnold Schwarzenegger has been in some really good flicks such as “Terminator,” “Total Recall” and “The Running Man” – this one will be a flop.The plot involves two Schwarzeneggers such as in the movie “Total Recall” did, so it could be tempting to see this film for some – but just don’t.In this film, smoking will be outlawed, people will be able to clone their pets, world hunger will be solved because of cloning, cloning human organs will be legal and cloning humans will be illegal.Schwarzenegger plays Adam Gibson, a family man whose job is a helicopter pilot for the extreme sports industry. He flies snowboarders up mountains in a whacky futuristic helicopter that can also transform into a plane. His co-worker Hank (Michael Rapaport) enjoys virtual girls instead of real ones.One day one of the most powerful and rich men in the world, Drucker (Tony Goldwyn), shows up wanting a lift to the mountain. Gibson is supposed to take the flight, but because it’s his birthday, Hank takes the job.This is where things start to go wrong.He wakes up in a cab at the mall feeling woozy, looking to purchase a cloned dog for his daughter. Upon returning home, he sees that he is already there. He has been cloned.Schwarzenegger then proceeds to kick butt in many less-than-interesting action sequences, none of which are done well.While Schwarzenegger is dealing with the fact that his life was stolen and getting shot at by the ‘bad guys,’ he seems to find the strength to crack jokes. Bad jokes. Hollywood needs to try and put some realism in their films, even when dealing with movies in which Schwarzenneger is cloned.Maybe if the film was not filled with cheesy jokes and one-liners, it might have been more entertaining.This film may be watchable, unlike “Jingle All the Way” and “Junior,” but it never builds momentum, which leaves the story flat.