For starters it’s ambitious as fuck. Instead of setting the movie in modern times
like everyone else Van Damme went for a period piece by rolling the clock back
to 1925. Think about all the extra
effort you have to go through to make that work. You need period clothing, set design,
haircuts, weapons, vehicles, signage and a million other things. It would’ve been so much easier to set it in
1996 and save all that time and money. I
can only guess Van Damme is either a big old fashioned adventure stories fan
with scruffy fellas globetrotting and running into fanciful characters and
situations, or he really thought the 20’s backdrop would elevate the material. Both are plausible and actually the earlier
time period is a little cool. I guess
I’m just a sucker.
Another ambitious undertaking are all the locations required
for the story. You start out with a
montage of different fighters from around the world receiving invitations to
the tournament, which by itself is more than you would expect from this type of
film. Then there’s Van Damme’s
character, Chris Dubois, who starts out in NYC, stows away on a ship for a
while, winds up in Thailand and travels across Asia to the secret location of
the contest. Again, that’s a ton of
extra effort to go through for a picture with a simple and often seen concept. But maybe that’s just it. Since the public is very familiar with this
plot by now why not try to spice it up?
With that being said the entire film is fairly well done. You get the sense that Van Damme really cares
about the movie and is trying hard to craft something fun and exciting. There are a lot of nice touches like showcasing
so many different fighting styles, going for some cinematic angles and wider
shots, the production design is very nice, and Van Damme constantly changes his
look throughout with medium hair, buzzed cut, beard, clean shaven, clown
makeup, scars, etc. I think it’s hard to
miss that a bunch of pretty thoughtful work went into this.
Doesn't it look like these stills are from four different movies? |
There are some questionable choices like Roger Moore (Fire, Ice & Dynamite, A View to a Kill) who’s fun ‘n all but
man, he’s a total cheeseball. There’s an
intro with Van Damme as an old man who beats up some assholes that attempt to
rob the bar he’s in. After he takes care
of them the old man proceeds to tell the bartender the story of the movie. It wasn’t necessary at all and it’s amazing
that trouble finds this guy no matter where he goes or how old he gets. All of the characters have little to no depth
and are stereotyped to hell like the brassy dame reporter from NYC, the wise
guy mobsters, the Irish cops, all of the participants in the tournament and so
on. The worst offense might be having a
fighter from the country of Africa. I
mean they couldn’t come up with the name of an African country, any fucking
African country? That’s kinda bad.
(You could also say that James Remar (48 Hrs., The Phantom) is a bad choice because he’s such a goddamn goofy
actor, especially in this, but I love the sonuvabitch. I don’t know what it is about him but I love
to watch him work. Keep on chugging
Jimmy, you’re the man.)
But overall I had a good time watching this again. Van Damme put forth a strong effort and that
shines through. He seemed to take the
idea of going on a quest for supreme victory in the fighting world to heart by whisking
away the audience to exotic locales and exposing them to many different
characters. Interestingly the film works
better as an adventure movie than a Kumite movie in my opinion.
I wouldn’t necessarily recommend The Quest (bland title by the way), only if you want to check out
what a Van Damme directed movie is like (better than you’d think, very competent
but nothing special).
No comments:
Post a Comment