Burl talking! You know, I’ve noticed a bit of a trend in the
movies recently: action pictures taking place in one single apartment building!
Attack the Block, The Raid: Redemption and the new Judge
Dredd movie, Dredd 3-D, all qualify!
But this concept isn’t new, of course, and today I’m here to give you an
example of this microgenre from the year 1987! It’s called Enemy Territory, and co-stars none other than Ray Parker Jr.! Ha
ha, who ya gonna call!
It’s a tightly constructed little movie! It starts with an
insurance guy at the end of his rope, who, like Harry Potter in The Woman in Black, is ordered by his
boss to undertake an apparently simple but very difficult mission in order to
save his job! The insurance guy is played by an actor I was unfamiliar with
called Gary Frank, and he turned out to be really quite a capable performer!
Gary’s character was named either Barry or Larry, and his mission was to
collect a signature and fee from an old policy-buying lady in a notoriously
gang-ridden area of town!
The building turns out to be controlled by a particularly
nasty gang called The Vampires! While they aren’t literally vampires, their
leader is played by Candyman himself, Tony Todd, and he calls himself The
Count! (And he turns out to actually believe he is a vampire, ha ha!) The
supernatural theme extends to our hero, who is referred to as “The Ghost” by
the gang members!
Gary-Barry-Larry pretty quickly runs afoul of the gang and
is targeted for extermination! He’s trapped in the building, the semi-friendly
security guard who was escorting him is knifed, and there seems nowhere to turn
– but luckily, Ray Parker Jr. is visiting the building too! He plays a
telephone repairman who happens to be in the tower for one reason: bustin’ quite
simply makes him feel good! But he has a code of helping out anyone who needs
it, so soon it’s him and Gary-Barry-Larry against the Vampires, who number in
the dozens!
The hapless insurance agent and his telephone repairman
friend (who’s almost as out of place as the tie-sporting white man, given that
the building apparently has no telephones in it) battle their way from
apartment to apartment, occasionally swinging down a floor or two on bedsheets,
or sneaking down the stairs, or climbing down the elevator shaft! They get help
from an adorable moppet, an elderly grandma, a tough teenage girl and a
grizzled, paranoid, wheelchair-bound Vietnam veteran played by Jan Michael
Vincent from Damnation Alley!
It’s a lean picture all right: the pursuit starts early and
keeps going right through to the end! Unfortunately there’s not actually that
much action in it, and a few dull stretches here and there! But it never gets
outright boring, thankfully! The performances are better than you’d think all
around; and the movie was shot by the very talented Ernest Dickerson, so it
looks a lot better than this sort of thing typically does! There’s perfectly
functional direction from a guy named Peter Manoogian, who directed Seedpeople but was also an assistant
director on movies like Fear City and
Lies! It’s nothing tremendously
special, but I enjoyed the movie and I think you might too! I give Enemy Territory two spray-painted titles
just like in They Live!
Thanks for the tie-ins to this movie! I was watching Dredd and had watched The Raid not long ago and was like : who ripped who!?!
ReplyDeleteSo I'm downloading Enemy Territory to compare but I also read about a previous inspiration to all of them : "Where Eagles Dare". Seen it?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065207/
Ha ha, no, I haven't seen Where Eagles Dare! I always thought it was part of a different microgenre, Mountain Climbing Action, just like The Eiger Sanction! Anyway, I'll have to see it! Hope you enjoy Enemy Territory!
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