Ok round III.After
the events of Part II Rambo stuck around in Thailand (I guess he earned
that presidential pardon even after threatening to kill the commander in
charge?) living with Buddhist monks helping to repair their temple.He does some brawling on the side for extra
dough (this part is kinda fishy but I’ll circle back to it).Colonel Trautman (Richard Crenna (Hot
Shots! Part Deux)) comes seeking Rambo’s help once again except this time
in Afghanistan.Soviet invaders are
massacring the population and they need to be stopped.The Afghans are fighting back and doing a
good job but there’s one particular region that the Soviets still rule with an
iron fist.Rambo declines the offer
because he’s finally at peace with himself.Well except when he has the occasional stick match in town to pick up
some frog skins for the freakend.Anyway, Trautman goes on the mission himself, gets captured (he’s magically
snuck up on by an enemy helicopter (?)) and now Rambo’s got the motivation to
rescue his buddy/mentor…oh and help the Afghans while he’s there.
This almost comes off like a re-do of Part II.The plot is pretty similar where Rambo must
fly solo in a very dangerous situation to save a captured comrade.The enemy choice is the same too because the
Cold War was still happening at the time and the Soviets were an obvious easy
target.And there’s the usual machine
guns blazing, explosive tipped arrows and helicopter battle type shit.
The Afghans are actually shown as brave warriors albeit
somewhat primitive (they’ve never seen a glow stick before which in 1988 I find
hard to believe).They end up saving
Rambo’s ass during the finale and help him throughout his mission.BUT the implication is that they would not
have succeeded against the Soviets if it weren’t for Rambo busting in there and
murdering a shitload of them.
And the machoism of Rambo is something I haven’t touched on
yet.In First Blood John Rambo is
rugged but he wrestles with the ruthless aggression he’s been taught to hone
and exploit in warfare.You see him
struggling against what has become second nature, combat and survival by any
means necessary.In Part II he
has no qualms about blowing dozens of people away and his strength alone is all
that’s required to overcome the adversary.Part III is the same.Any
nuance the character had originally is wiped away.It turns into chest beating cave man shit
that unfortunately is very popular with a large audience.The character’s a robot.What do we really know about John Rambo?He kills things.That’s about it.
You could say Rambo is America or at least how a lot of
Americans like to think of themselves.He’s an unstoppable force that can cure anything through sheer will and might.This aspect is nauseating and part of why I
could never get into these follow ups.
Surprisingly there was an attempt to lighten up the guy a
bit in this installment.Towards the end
of the film Rambo all of a sudden starts throwing out one liners.Even when faced with certain death as the
entire Soviet army has their guns, tanks and helicopters pointed at he and
Trautman Rambo makes a quip.It comes
off as unnatural as you would imagine.This guy hasn’t made a single joke across two and a half movies and now
he’s fuckin’ Mr. Comedy.Such a weird
decision.
You know what’s a real issue though?The action. Most of the sequences in Part III
involve gunplay and it’s not in a badass John Woo sort of way.It’s just Rambo flatly mowing down his
enemies with a machine gun or a bow and arrow. Part II had the same issue where it all
blends together after a while.They do a
big helicopter chase/fight scene too which again, is similar to Part II.Jeez, the action isn’t varied nearly enough
and it isn’t artfully done so it gets boring.
It also takes over forty minutes for Rambo to start doin’
his killin’ thang.This makes me
suspicious of the underground fight scene in the beginning I mentioned
earlier.We’re introduced to Rambo battling
some dude in front of a huge ravenous crowd of gamblers.The scene doesn’t seem to serve any real
purpose other than to include more fighting.I have a feeling this scene was added after the filmmakers realized
almost no action takes place until deep into the movie.
I guess in one sense they make up for lost time by having a
staggering body count of 127.How did we
get here?First Blood is so
quaint compared to its sequels.
This is a really dumb movie.I mean I do like how there seemed to be a conscious effort to place
Rambo in a different setting each time.The thing is the result is still the same as Part II.Where’s the heart?Where’s the soul?It’s stupid American barbarian crap where
only we can make the difference, even if you don’t want us to.
First Blood is not the type of film that needs a
sequel.It’s perfectly self-contained
and doesn’t hint at new adventures or leave plotlines unresolved.Where do you go with the main character?
We start appropriately with Rambo in prison breaking
rocks.After the shit he pulled a few
years prior in Washington this is exactly where he should be.Colonel Trautman (Richard Crenna (Body Heat)) visits Rambo to make him an offer.They want to sneak him into Vietnam on recon to check on American
prisoners of war who have been held there since the 70’s.Rambo accepts instantly.The issue is the commander in charge of the
operation, Murdock (Charles Napier (Philadelphia, Original Gangstas)),
only wants photos taken, no liberating.It turns out Murdock doesn’t give a shit about the POWs.He’s only doing this to placate his
superiors.Of course Rambo defies orders
and goes for the rescue anyway.
Since no one was gonna make a movie about John Rambo’s
ongoing struggling relationship with his country, brothers in arms, mentors,
civilians and own mental health I guess the scenario they came up with makes as
much sense as anything else.Let’s see
the guy in his natural element: war.There are still ideology differences between he and authority figures
but the main fight is with the Vietnamese and the Soviets.Don’t fret though, the bureaucrats get their
comeuppance.
There’s a stiffness to First Blood Part II that’s
apparent to begin with but after having just seen First Blood the
contrast is pretty stark.Rambo isn’t a
tragic figure here who loses grip on reality.Instead he’s simply a meathead on a mission.They tried to insert a love interest to make
it more like a typical action movie and maybe to make him more relatable but man
does it feel extremely forced.
And ok sure, you’re not gonna watch a Rambo sequel for the
nuances in plot or character.You can
certainly have both but I get it, just blow stuff up real good.Well a big problem with the action is it all
blends together.It’s Rambo shooting up or
stabbing dudes for the most part.They
didn’t really come up with cool or inventive sequences.The last twenty minutes where Rambo uses a
helicopter to blow the fuck out of everything in sight does make you sit up and
take notice but only because of how over the top it is.
It also doesn’t help that Rambo’s invincible now which
reduces any sense of danger.He gets
tangled up in his gear while jumping out of a plane, tortured and constantly shot
at. No matter the situation he muscles
through it. At one point Rambo doesn’t
even pretend anymore and stands unprotected in front of a bad guy unloading his
pistol on him.Nothing touches him.
Strangely I kept being reminded of Escape from New York
during this last viewing which came out the year before.You have an inmate recruited to infiltrate a
dangerous place solo in order to retrieve some folks held captive.They both drop the hero in by plane,
rendezvous with an ally already inside, eventually get captured by the enemy
and make a daring escape.
It’s impossible to ignore the James Cameron connection
here.Cameron worked as a matte painter
on Escape from New York and wrote the original script for First Blood
Part II.Maybe he borrowed some ideas.I dunno, Stallone rewrote it so I’m not sure
how much of Cameron’s shit made it into the final product, probably not a ton.
It’s interesting though that like First Blood Part II
Cameron’s own Aliens also goes off the fucking rails, especially when compared
to their predecessors.These might be
the two most extreme examples of a first sequel taking it three levels higher
than needed.However, unlike First
Blood Part IIAliens is a masterpiece that builds on the characters
and Alien universe in a creative and more natural way.
My buddy summed up Part II perfectly by pointing out
there’s no heart.There’s no emotional
investment and that in part doesn’t make it all that fun either.We should be rooting for John to get the POWs
out and all the tension that goes with that.The POWs are supposed to be driving the plot but it turns into mindless
killing and an unnecessary subplot about Murdock being a slimy asshole who
doesn’t actually want to help anybody.
The only positive I can say is that they didn’t lazily rehash
the first movie with Rambo snapping again and going on a rager against the law
or another group of people in some small town.They scaled it up significantly but too much in my opinion by having
Rambo battle two armies.I mean the body
count is 67 compared to 1 in First Blood.
So I’m not too keen on this one.You could start thirty minutes from the end
and be in the same place mentally as if you watched from the beginning.I might recommend doing that if you’re
curious about the ridiculous spectacle it turns into.
It’s hard to talk about First Blood without putting
it in the context of the entire franchise.The sequels are so different and are what people think about when the
name Rambo is mentioned.You know, huge
ass explosions, guns constantly blazing, dead bodies stacked to the ceiling,
‘merica fuck yea, etc.But things didn’t
start out that way.So I wanna isolate
the original as much as I can and block out what came after.Hopefully that’ll yield more fruitful
results.(Don’t worry, we’ll get to all
the sequels in due time)
John Rambo’s extraordinary post-military life starts off unassuming
but very tragic.You can see in his eyes
and demeanor that his soul has been broken after hearing the news of his war
buddy’s death.Exposure to Agent Orange
in Vietnam resulted in cancer taking its toll when he got back home. Rambo doesn’t know where he’s going or what
he’ll do next.This sadness and bottled
up rage towards the military, civilians and society as a whole boils over to
fuel his rampage against anyone who crosses his path.
The storm within builds even more when small town Sheriff
Teasle (Brian Dennehy (Best Seller)) doesn’t really give Rambo a chance
and escorts him out of city limits at first sight.This part feels rushed but the point is effectively
made.And the escalation of abhorrent
behavior Rambo receives from the other officers is enough to where you wanna
see this guy break some skulls.Being
beaten, verbally abused and shot at with a fire hose definitely crosses the
line.This triggers flashbacks to being tortured
in a prison camp and he fucking freaks.
Once Rambo busts out of the Sheriff’s office the action
doesn’t let up for a long while.The
chase is on and you wonder the whole time where this will eventually go.Rambo adapts very quickly to the pacific
northwest mountains with makeshift camouflage garb and setting booby traps for
his followers.It’s exhilarating the way
Rambo turns the tables so fast by taking the cops out of their element and
bringing them into his.
What’s really important is Rambo doesn’t want to hurt
anybody at first.He injures his pursuers
to take them out of the game but doesn’t mortally wound them.In fact he willingly gives up after the
accidental death of a cop (the worst asshole of them all too giving the
audience some bit of satisfaction even though Rambo is troubled with the outcome
(also, this is the only confirmed death in the film, yea First Blood has
a body count of 1)).When the cops
refuse and start shooting at him Rambo runs away but still doesn’t plan to
engage with his adversaries as far as we can tell.If they left him alone he would probably make
a home in the woods and never bother anyone ever again.Extending an olive branch makes Rambo the
better man and gets us permanently on his side.And at the same time the swatting away of that peace offering does
irreparable damage for the cops in our minds.They drew first blood.
I don’t know if I’d call this a high concept action picture
with the cleverly executed extremely straightforward and streamlined plot but
it’s damn close.It’s unconventional in
that the lines are blurred between good guys and bad guys, the cops are the
villains, the military shares some blame for Rambo’s condition, our hero is
like a machine yet is overcome with a deluge of feelings when pushed over the
edge and there’s no romantic interest (not only would that be inappropriate
here but there’s simply no room).
The finale is unusual as well.It starts off typical with Rambo infiltrating
enemy territory and blowing up as much shit as he can (without casualties).But the climax is an emotional meltdown.Rambo is frustrated, depressed and apoplectic
over how the military used he and his friends only to toss them aside when they
were through.He can’t escape the
haunting memories of war that he believes the military is partially to blame
for.Stallone’s performance is great
overall but in this scene he’s heart wrenching.Finally we understand why he lashed out so hard.He’s been carrying a lot for a long time.
I can see why this was a hit.The combination of character study, societal
views towards war veterans and how we treat them, abuse of power by the law,
bigotry and, of course, Rambo’s use of force is powerful.It’s different from what audiences were used
to and they embraced it.
Everything came together.If you haven’t seen First Blood yet then you really should.It’s required reading for any self-respecting
action film aficionado but it’s also just a good movie period.
So Nighthawks, it’s a 1981 gritty urban cop drama
very much in the 70’s pseudo-documentary style that pictures like The French
Connection and The Seven-Ups made popular.Terrorist Wulfgar (Rutger Hauer (Blind
Fury)) is on the run after bombing a London department store and comes to
NYC. But instead of hiding out he
continues to wreak havoc.Meanwhile cops
Deke DaSilva (Stallone) and Matthew Fox (Billy Dee Williams (Batman (1989))) are recruited to be part of an anti-terrorist unit within the police
department specifically to track down Wulfgar.
The movie’s fine.All
aspects are played straight up without much flair, the performances are good
(especially Williams who gets impassioned at times), the plot’s always moving
forward at a nice pace and the action set pieces are pretty neat.The biggest by far is the part where Wulfgar
holds a group of people hostage, including several international diplomats, on
a Roosevelt Island tram car high above the East River.How’s Wulfgar gonna make his daring escape?How will DaSilva and Fox take the bastard
down?
Two things I don’t totally understand.Earlier in the film DaSilva and Fox chase
Wulfgar on foot and it goes on for a while across a bunch of blocks, through
underground construction and finally they wind up in a subway train.Wulfgar eventually gets away (spoiler) but after
this incident he detests DaSilva for some unknown reason.Fox was part of the chase too but Wulfgar doesn’t
seem to care as much about him. During
the Roosevelt Island tram episode Wulfgar asks for DaSilva personally to come
and remove a baby on board and while they’re face to face takes the opportunity
to rub DaSilva’s nose in the shitty situation.On top of that Wulfgar then demands DaSilva drive the bus full of
hostages to the airport.This animosity
only for DaSilva comes out of nowhere.
Well the culprit points to some severe editing that took
place at the hands of Stallone and later the producers to make the focus more
on DaSilva and to tighten up the runtime.That makes sense because the characters are fairly underdeveloped and
there isn’t much of a build up to the tram scene or Wulfgar’s seething hatred
toward DaSilva.
The other thing I don’t get is the title.DaSilva and Fox don’t work exclusively at
night and the word nighthawks is never used.Whatever, sounds kinda cool I guess.
This won’t change your life or anything and isn’t all that
interesting in the larger context of Stallone’s career.He doesn’t write, direct or produce this
time.He’s simply an actor for hire.This is his first cop role (I believe) which
would become something he would revisit periodically throughout the years.Unlike some other action stars of his era who
seemed to play nothing but lawmen it would take Sly a good ten years before he
carried a badge.
One last item, there’s an awesome action connection here in
that this was directed by Bruce Malmuth who went on to make the Steven Seagal
classic Hard to Kill and the very fun Dolph Lundgren Olympics thriller Pentathlon.
Time for a little Stallone retrospective.I’ll be going over a mix of the less popular films
he’s done as well as one of his biggest franchises (it’s a 50/50 guess which
one we’ll do).This stemmed from “The
Ultimate Stallone Reader” which I had plenty of time to take in as I’m spending
a lot more time at home like the rest of you with this crazy ass shit happening
out there.
The first movie I checked out on this journey was Driven
from 2001.I’d never seen it before so
that seemed like a good place to start.It’s about upstart CART racing genius Jimmy Bly (Kip Pardue (The
Rules of Attraction)) and his rivalry with multi-championship winner Beau
Brandenburg (Til Schweiger (Inglorious Bastards)).As these things go they bicker off the track and
naturally fight over a woman (Estella Warren (Planet of the Apes (2001)))
which doesn’t end how you would predict and feels wrong (just one of many unusual
decisions made).Stallone plays an aging
driver who gets asked by team owner Burt Reynolds (Silent Movie) to come
out of retirement to help Bly win the season.Sly mentors the kid and drives alongside him to keep the other cars from
placing.
First thing I gotta mention is I don’t know jack shit about
professional car racing of any kind.After
some research I found out that this takes place in the world of IndyCar as
opposed to Formula 1.Specifically this
is about CART (Championship Auto Racing Teams) which dissolved in 2003 shortly
after the film was made.If there are
any racing fans out there is this any sort of intriguing glimpse into a bygone
era?Does the movie give an accurate
depiction of this racing style?I mean I
assume it doesn’t but I’m always curious about accuracy in pictures.
Anyway, setting aside my lack of knowledge on the subject
matter the movie is terrible.It reeks
of early 2000’s panache.Way too many
closeup shots, there’s frantic coke-fueled editing, repulsive CGI work
(especially in the last race where it’s overused making certain shots look like
ugly video game graphics) and a nu-metal/angsty soundtrack.Not to mention the incessant ogling of young
hot ladies in skimpy outfits.Jesus,
this combination of puke is too much for one film.
Plus all the characters are remarkably boring and one dimensional.
I didn’t give a shit about any of them including
Stallone.The casting choices are a head
scratcher as well because none of the actors have any chemistry.Relationships are supposed to have been formed
and broken but every move feels contrived.There were clearly numerous scenes that were either shortened to less
than thirty seconds or excised all together because there are several montages
of these clipped sections pieced together. As a result the character development is very
awkward with strange and abrupt changes.For example Stallone has a private talk with Brandenburg (aka the
villain) encouraging him to get back together with his girlfriend who’s with Jimmy
Bly now.Bly is the hero and Sly is on
his team so what the fuck is he doing?!
The car racing stuff isn’t all that exciting either.Based on this and Days of Thunder it
seems hard to make official car races (not street races or car chases)
engaging.The human element is more
removed because you can’t see the driver’s face or body.In other sports films that showcase a
different activity like basketball, baseball, arm wrestling, etc. you see the
body contorting and the face wrenching while achieving this majestic physical
feat.With car racing it’s cars passing
each other and not much else.It’s difficult
to make that cinematic.
This is almost boring.If there wasn’t so much dated crap bombarding your brain all the time
this would be such a slog.In that sense
it’s a time capsule curiosity.Sure The Fast and the Furious came out the same year and exhibits a whole helluva
lot of the same qualities but the story and the handling of the characters and
the action sequences are a million times better.
I wish I could say something positive here because I dig a
lot of the folks involved like Renny Harlin, Stallone (who also wrote this),
Burt Reynolds and Gina Gershon but I’m struggling.
Here’s where they fucked up: several people in the picture
refer to Stallone’s character’s wild past where he drove his car and his life
to such a breaking point that Gershon utterly hates his guts for how he treated
her and Reynolds holds a bit of a grudge because of his old antics. Where the fuck is that movie?
After some regrettable neglect I finally got around to a
handful of Jesse V. Johnson joints.He
started out as a stuntman racking up some serious credits over the years like Total
Recall, Cutthroat Island, Starship Troopers, The Thin Red Line, Terminator 3,
War of the Worlds, Avatar and The Amazing Spider-Man.He even has a special effects assistant
credit on Hellraiser II and a set production assistant credit on The
Shawshank Redemption.Wow.The man’s been writing and directing since
the late 90’s but in recent years he’s been teaming up with the legendary Scott
Adkins to make some of the best action films of the 2010’s (and hopefully
beyond).Let’s take a brief look at five
of the six they’ve done so far (I didn’t see Pit Fighter from 2005).
(Just one note, I don’t want to give the impression that Johnson
only works exclusively with Adkins.He’s
made many other movies with a range of actors which I’m sure kick ass and hope
to check out soon.)
Savage Dog (2017)
Savage Dog is a bit different than the other films on
this list because it’s a period piece that takes place in 1959 Indochina (I
think it’s supposed to be Vietnam specifically).Adkins plays a former IRA member who’s held
prisoner by a rogue group of war criminal misfits led by an ex-Nazi (Vladimir
Kulich (The 13th Warrior)).They force the prisoners to fight each other while gambling on the
outcome.The loser naturally gets
executed.
The corrupt outfit feels that Adkins has paid his debt after
three and a half years and let him go with the catch that they’ll call on him
to fight again in the future.Adkins
gets taken in by amiable bar owner Keith David (Ken Burns Jazz) to
become his bouncer and friend.Through a
series of events Adkins must return to underground fighting but also avenge the
murder attempt on he and his girlfriend.
This one’s a little rough around the edges.There are some awkward scene transitions and
editing, the special effects are very cheap looking at times and a few story
decisions are strange. For instance
Adkins fights off a thousand enemies in the finale but the last bad guy
escapes.Adkins trails and then fights
him in some town presumably a couple of days later.There was no reason to delay this fight by a
few minutes of runtime.It doesn’t add
anything to the story.
There’s a gruesome stretch where Adkins goes after people
with a machete hacking off body parts and ramming that sucker into shoulders
and chests.It’s extremely nasty to
witness.Also, at one point Adkins digs
a huge knife into the abdomen of a foe, digs out their liver and takes a bite
of it in front of the still conscious dying man.The machete attacks are vicious enough but
the liver scene is probably the most grotesque thing in all the films discussed
here.
So this one’s ok.The
story’s a tad confusing and several of the technical aspects need some work but
the action is solid.It’s also weird
that it seems Johnson was going for something slightly lofty with the late 50’s
setting, the text on screen at the beginning setting up the situation, the
completely unnecessary narration describing Adkins’ situation and feelings and
the quote about valor and honor at the end.
Accident Man (2018)
Adkins is part of a group that specializes in making hits
look like accidents so no one suspects foul play.But the tables have turned and now someone has
put a contract out on him.He goes on
the run while investigating who wants him dead and why.
This one’s based on a comic book series of the same name and
includes different members of the accident club who have their own specific way
of staging a murder.One guy only uses
poison, another wields an ax, a duo are special forces dudes (Ray Park (Darth
Maul in The Phantom Menace) and Michael Jai White (Black Dynamite)),
a lady samurai (stunt woman extraordinaire Amy Johnston (Lady Bloodfight,
stunts: Terminator: Dark Fate, Deadpools, Suicide Squad, Spider-Man: Far
From Home)) and a guy who uses unconventional methods like a microwave
bomb.
Interestingly as of this post this film is Adkins’ only
writing credit (who he co-wrote with Stu Small (The Debt Collector,
Avengement (we’ll get to both of those)). I wonder if he penned the copious amount of
narration because there’s a helluva lot.
The tone is a touch lighter than the others on the list.There’s a rock music soundtrack and it’s also
more jokey but adorably so. For example Adkins
has to get the PMT (post murder tension) out of his system by beating the shit
out of rape-y assholes at a bar while commenting on their lack of fighting
technique and lighting a fella’s cigarette only to punch the poor bastard out
immediately afterward.This guy’s kind
of an all around grouchy dick seemingly in a constant bad mood but like I said,
Adkins makes it fun by pumping the breaks on the contempt just enough to make
the character enjoyable.
The fights are an enormous step up from Savage Dog.They flow marvelously and the hits feel extra
hard with the beefed up effects sounds.Adkins
faces off against all his colleagues and since each has a unique specialty the
battles yield a variety of flavors.All
involved are in top form and they keep the intensity high throughout.
Accident Man is a damn good time.While it’s not my absolute favorite here it’s
a good starting point if you’re interested in Johnson’s work (and I assume you
would be otherwise why would you be reading this?).
The Debt Collector (2018)
Down on his luck dojo owner Scott Adkins resorts to debt
collecting for a gangster so he can make enough money to keep his business
open.He’s teamed up with veteran Sue
(Louis Mandylor (The Quest)) to go around LA and either issue warnings
or rough up folks who owe large.
Out of these five this is my favorite.The chemistry between Adkins and Mandylor is key
to the whole thing.They don’t like each
other that much at first because Adkins is new to all this and doesn’t really
want to hurt anyone while Sue has been in the game a long time. He isn’t afraid to get tough from the start
plus he knows that if they don’t produce results it’s their asses.Going up against dickwad thugs of various
statures forms a bond between them.They
need to watch each other’s back if they want to stay in one piece by the end of
the day.The two grow to respect each
other and man is that great to see.
Mandylor gives such an amazing performance with a haunted
past that’s been eating at him for decades.He has a hollow relationship with a porn star/stripper who only hangs
around him to syphon off cash and he drinks himself to sleep every night.You can tell he has a good heart underneath
but can’t improve his situation nor is he really looking to.He’s punishing himself for shit that happened
long ago.
The very simple plot is not only easy to follow but it
allows for diverse situations to unfold.As the collectors go from one deadbeat to the next they encounter a
fresh set of douchebags they must battle in order to nab the money or get the
warning across.Sometimes they’re
gargantuan shit-your-pants type motherfuckers and sometimes they’re young punks
that pull a gun.They (and you) never quite
know what they’re walking into which adds a lot of excitement.
I can’t wait for the sequel that’s coming out soon.I’m definitely ready to collect some more
debts.
Triple Threat (2019)
Check out this insane cast: Tony Jaa (Ong-Baks), Iko
Uwais (The Raid: Redemption), Michael Jai White (Undisputed 2: Last Man Standing), Tiger Hu Chen (who I’m not so familiar with but he was in Man
of Tai Chi and John Wick 3 so he’s certainly ok in my book) and of
course Scott Adkins (well, you know).Whoever orchestrated the logistics of getting these all star badasses
together deserves a medal because I’m sure it wasn’t easy.
The story involves White, Jaa and Chen raiding a Thai prison
camp.Jaa and Chen think they’re there
to rescue the (innocent?) people being held captive but surprise! it’s a ploy
to break out notorious terrorist Adkins (who wears the worst goddamn wig of all
fucking time, but thankfully only for this one scene).Jaa and Chen are left for dead with a bomb
when they refuse to comply so of course they plot revenge when they survive.Uwais’ wife is killed during the attack on
the camp and he vows revenge as well.Meanwhile
a Chinese heiress (Celina Jade (The Man with the Iron Fists)) wants to
donate her fortune to fight crime which upsets a lot of folks so a contract is
put out on her headed up by the newly freed Adkins and White.Fortunately she runs into Jaa and Chen and
they protect her while fighting off the villains.Uwais is in the mix too somewhere.
So the triple threat here is Jaa, Chen and Uwais.And it’s a nice change of pace for White and
Adkins to play the bad guys (although not unprecedented, Adkins went bad in The
Expendables 2 and Undisputed 2 (but then turned good in Undisputed 3!), White turned bad in Universal Soldier: The Return (I think) and
played a gangster in The Dark Knight).
The big problem the movie suffers from is the needlessly
complicated plot.The heiress really
didn’t need to be in there as Jaa and Chen have more than enough motivation to
go after White and Adkins.We never even
find out who’s behind the hit contract or their potential ulterior motive for
wanting this lady dead (unless I missed that which is totally possible).
And Uwais gets treated pretty shittily.He tries to play both sides but the way it’s
handled is confusing and they turn him into a not very good fighter.Jaa and Chen are supposed to be the real
powerhouses on the good guy side and I guess Johnson and co figured three would
be too much of the same.I just have a
hard time accepting this because Uwais was like THE best fighter in The
Raids so it’s extremely weird to see him lose fairly easily to multiple
opponents.
Most of the fight scenes are cool though.The two on one brawl between Adkins, Jaa and
Chen is well done and there’s one stretch where Adkins and co are chasing Jaa
and co with a few stops for some skirmishes but it keeps going and going with
several location changes.I like the
nonstop determination of this part.It’s
like in a Terminator film where they don’t give you much breathing room.
Jaa looks like he’s having a blast too both in the fighting
and dialogue scenes.He and Chen are
charming motherfuckers in this.
Avengement (2019)
Adkins plays Cain Burgess, a young scrapper who wants to
borrow money from his gangster brother Lincoln (Craig Fairbrass (Cliffhanger)).Lincoln has a rule about never lending money
to family but will make an exception if Cain will do a job for him.Cain accepts, gets busted, spends years in
prison, busts out and seeks avengement.
The plot is wonderfully straightforward but they get a lot
of mileage by telling the story out of order and revealing the few twists and
turns at crucial points. You see Cain
holds his brother’s crew hostage at their hangout bar and tells them what happened
to him over the past several years while being careful to dole out the right info
at the right moment.This method works
really well to economically escalate the tension and suspense.Kudos to the filmmakers for taking something
that normally would’ve been way more ordinary and spicing it up.
And if you like fighting then this is the picture for
you.It feels like they packed in more
punches and kicks per square inch than the others on this list.And the violence is probably the most brutal overall
which includes a curb stomp on a set of stairs, a grisly head shot at point
blank range and many stabbings.
Cain’s arc is one of the highlights.He starts out as a naïve kid who’s never been
in trouble before but when he winds up in the hoosegow he has to get tough fast
or he won’t survive long.His boxing
background is a strong foundation but he trains hard to be able to dish out and
take huge amounts of pain.So by the
time he makes his escape he’s a different person.He’s a smashing machine.And I love that they go through the events of
how he received each and every one of his hideous scars.Usually a badass character has these marks
purely for visual flair but to actually put in the effort and give background
on them is such nice detail that almost no one ever bothers with.
Avengement is great.The devil is in the details here.Putting focus on some key areas like the narrative structure and Cain’s
transformation from puppy dog to ferocious bulldog makes all the
difference.It’s this creative thinking
and dedication to putting out an awesome exciting movie that makes Johnson an
outstanding filmmaker.