Showing posts with label Michael Dudikoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Dudikoff. Show all posts
Sunday, March 20, 2011

Moving Target (1996)

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Tagline:

Now the hunter has become the hunted!

Movie Review:

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Michael Dudikoff (American Ninja) is Sonny McClean (not quite Bruce Willis' John McClane but close enough), a bounty hunter who chases down guys who have skipped bail, much to the distaste of his long-time girlfriend who wants him to get a desk job. After a hilarious first ten minutes of chasing a bad guy, accidentally interrupting someones bondage session (complete with whips and gimp mask), cuffing the bad guy to a radiator and dragging him along the road tied to the back of his car, Dudikoff collects his reward and returns home to another fight of words with his girlfriend. When he returns to his car he is met by an elderly Russian couple who plead with him to find their son, Jonish, who has skipped out bail. He initially refuses but a ten thousand dollar downpayment reluctantly convinces him.

Dudikoff sets out to a cabin in the woods where he was told that Jonish was staying. After pretending to be a Pizza delivery guy to lure him out, Dudikoff finally takes Jonish in at gunpoint. As they are driving away Jonish tells him that his parents died years ago which gets Dudikoff worried that it's all a set up. Of course it is and they start getting chased by two guys on snow-mobiles firing at them. Dudikoff crashes the car, Jonish is executed by his persuers and Duikoff is knocked out cold. When he comes to, Detective Don Racine (Billy Dee Williams) informs him that he is the prime suspect for the murder of Jonish. If that wasn't bad enough now the Russian mafia boss, who is the father of the deceased, is out for Dudikoff's blood.

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This was a pretty fun time. There's nothing that I would quite describe as explosive action; more like slightly singed action, so you better put a wet towel over it. That being said there is barely a moment when there is no action on the screen. Only the scenes when Dudikoff is quibbling with his girlfriend really have no action in them, and one of them does anyway - her birth class is interrupted by more thugs in motorcycle gear and machine guns, out to kill Dudikoff. Most of the action revolves around Dudikoff having a punch-on with Russian thugs or guys in motorbike helmets, fleeing armed attackers on snowmobiles in his jalopy and a few other shots fired here and there. The ending get's a little more explosive when rival Russian gangs break out the machine guns over a meeting table with Dudikoff stuck in the middle. There's a couple of funny moments in the fights, my favourite being when Dudikoff takes out a bad guy by throwing a billiard ball at his forehead and knocking the guy clean out.

It was also a little strange how the movie started off with Dudikoff being a bumbling bounty hunter and there being lots of comedy hijinks but then as the movie progressed it got slightly more darker and more serious. By the end there was no comedy left. It was an interesting way to change your perceptions of the character as the film played out.

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Billy Dee Williams is just along for the ride in this and to add another recognisable name on the movie poster. The first time you see him is pretty hilarious; he's stumbling around drunkely in a bar until Dudikoff escorts him out. He's not very good at acting drunk so perhaps the producers thought "you know, I think we could reduce Lando's scenes a bit." Other than that, he plays one of the detectives at the police station and has a friendship with Dudikoff, similar to that he has with another officer Jake (Ardon Bess). Both inevitably get in harms way to help out Dudikoff, which is nice I guess.

Moving Target was produced in 1996 but it looks more like 1989. Dudikoff drives a beat up old truck filled with what looks like Christmas decorations and his denim jeans and puffy jacket betray the actual year. It looks like a sleepy town so perhaps that's why it feels older than it actually is. The synth rock music, complete with drum machine, positions the movie well as an 80's action thriller that sat on the shelves unreleased for the best part of a decade. Picking the bad guys as Russians also helps with this case.

Pretty good overall and it probably shouldn't be as it's not hugely memorable. Dudikoff kicks enough arse to keep you interested and I didn't yawn once. The film was directed by the guy that did Dolph Lundgren's Agent Red which I haven't checked out yet. I'd happily watch it again one day, and at 85 minutes it won't eat into your day too much. I paid too much for this at $12 new but without importing I don't think I'd have gotten it any cheaper. Worth checking out.

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The Video:

I reviewed the R4 disc put out by Force Entertainment a few years back. It sports a full-frame picture that looks like it was filmed for TV and probably was. Nothing remarkable but no particular issues either. The stereo soundtrack was clear though I had to crank the volume up a bit. Runtime 85 minutes.

Sourced From:

A random DVD shop which is probably luckier than you will normally get in Australia for this title. It would be easier for everyone else to just get the R1 or VHS from Amazon.

Trailer:

More Screens:

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Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Executive Command aka Strategic Command (1997)

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Tagline:

Five international terrorists. One Gulf War hero. 40,000,000 innocent lives at stake.

Back of DVD:

Terrorists have stolen a shipment of germ warfare devices and Rick is asked to profile the terrorists and come up with possible scenarios and solutions for recovering the germ warfare bombs.

Alone and unarmed, 30,000 feet in the air, Rick must stop this gang of terrorists lead by the craft madman known as The Panther.

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Movie Review:

First thing off the bat. That back cover of this DVD is wrong. Like, totally wrong. And I only included half of it as it was too painful to type the rest out; it went for about five paragraphs and obscured half of the back artwork. Let me list the things that are wrong with the cover description:

  • Rick is not a hostage negotiator
  • Rick is not a family man who builds swing sets for his daughter
  • Rick does not foil a bank robbery and there are no ruthless thieves
  • Rick does not single-handedly kill said thieves
  • Rick does not shoot the leader in the head, narrowly avoiding a hostage
  • Rick does not go on a holiday to Washington
  • Rick does not profile the terrorists and come up with possible scenarios and solutions for recovering the germ warfare bombs
  • Rick is not 'alone and unarmed'
  • THE LEADER OF THE TERRORISTS IS NOT CALLED THE PANTHER

I had to capitalise that last part because it is just so ridiculous. I don't know what movie this cover was talking about but I really have to see it. The only thing they got right was that Dudikoff was called Rick.

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Anyway, you have seen this movie before, but then it was called Executive Decision. This made-for-tv rip off lifts many scenes from the Kurt Russel/Steven Seagal version. Dudikoff plays the Kurt Russel character, and his wife in the movie (played by Amanda Wyss) plays the Halle Berry character. Dissapointingly though there is no Steven Seagal character that gets sucked out of a telescopic tunnel between two airlocks - though there IS a telescopic tunnel and the same drama does unfold, but no-one dies.

But I digress. Michael Dudikoff plays Doctor Rick Harding, an ex-Iraq war vet who now makes chemical weapons for the FBI. Before the opening credits have even even ended, Dudikoff's lab is infiltrated by terrorists who kill a few security guys, punch-on with Rick and run off with a deadly nerve warfare chemical called Bromax 365. Apparently the stuff is so deadly it will kill you in less than fifteen seconds, unless you manage to inject the back of your own neck with adrenaline. One of the terrorists breaks a bag and he starts vomiting white liquid just like in The Stuff. Certainly doesn't look like a pleasant way to go.

Rick goes home to his wife who tells him she is interviewing the vice president on a flight to wherever. The next day she goes to the airport to board the flight but her cameraman didn't show. Luckily though 'the agency sent a replacement' who happened to be the same lead terrorist from earlier (played by Richard Norton) but this time wearing an appalling pair of glasses. Everyone boards the plane and they take off, but stowed in the hold are the rest of the terrorist gang who proceed to plant a bomb on the plane containing the Bromax 365 chemical. Cue takeover of plane, demands for a foreign prisoner heldon American soil to be released, hostages killed, etc.

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Lead terrorist Richard Norton doesn't play a guy called The Panther, but he does play a guy called Carlos Gruber. I thought that was a nice name check to Hans Gruber from Die Hard there. He has a sassy female associate who seems to get off on killing other women, and a bunch of army types with an array of accents as backup. The only other guy I recognise in this is Paul Winfield who played a head FBI type guy, similar to the head police type guy he played in The Terminator.

Dudikoff has only a couple of punch-ups in this movie and they aren't that good. He has one in an elevator at the beginning, and a couple on the plane later. He does clobber a guy with a cooking pot but that is about as interesting as the fights go. He also gets to land the plane while getting instructions from a guy who is in the next compartment. Now I know the guy had been hurt but come on, he could have made it to the cockpit. Speaking of the plane, there is an awful lot of stock footage in Executive Command of planes and jets taking off, landing, firing, but unfortunately not crashing. Not many explosions in this one folks, though there is a nice shootout at the pier early on in the piece that has cars crashing through boxes and a few barrels blowing up.

I paid two bucks for this and that was it's RRP. It's worth about that. If there wasn't a movie called Executive Decision I'd be a bit more favourable towards Executive Command, but there was and I'm not going to be. It's not all bad, you've just seen it before. Okay to watch if it's on late at night.

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The Video:

Curtosey of Flashback Entertainment we are presented with what I think is the correct OAR a 4:3 full screen picture. The quality of this is fine; colours and sharpness are good, blacks are deep. Some of the stock footage is grainy. Sound is clear. Overall the presentation reflects the budget of the movie.

Sourced From:

Dick Smith for $2 in the bargain bins.

Trailer:

More Screens:

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