With vocal jocularity, ha ha, it’s Burl,
here to give you a taste of Silent Rage!
Yes, we’re talking about the Chuck Norris horror movie made by the portly
director of Class Reunion! (Chuck
apparently did another horror picture later on, called Hellbound, but I’ve never seen it and am not at all certain it
really exists! Ha ha!)
This picture begins in a rooming house,
where a mentalsman called John Kirby, played by Brian Libby from Dreamscape, sweats and mutters, then
grabs an axe and gives a couple of unfortunate folks the chop! But pretty soon
Sheriff Chuck Norris arrives on the scene, and there is a scuffle! The end
result is the raging, flailing maniac blasted repeatedly by police revolvers!
Ha ha, end of story!
But no, not so fast! The dying maniac is
transported to some kind of clinic, where a trio of medicos played by Ron
Silver from Timecop, Steven Keats
from Black Sunday, and William Finlay
from The Fury, do some Dr.
Frankenstein science on him and render him invulnerable! Ha ha, just what
everyone needs, good going fellows! Silver isn’t actually a part of the
resuscitation - in fact he considers it unwise, while Keats acts out the
monomaniacal mad scientist routine and Finlay just helps!
Pretty soon, of course, the undying maniac
is loose, and on the prowl for people to kill! He settles on Silver and his
wife, and there’s a good, tense scene at their appealingly bohemian house, with
a great final shocker! Ha ha, this scene is perhaps the movie’s finest! Chuck,
meanwhile, is having a romance with Silver’s sister and battling a biker gang;
and Stephen Furst from The Unseen plays
a developmentally delayed deputy whom Norris has deemed trainable! They must
all go up against the terrible maniac with his self-healing flesh and
superstrength muscles!
Now, as I’ve said, there are some genuinely
tense and well-handled suspense scenes here; but for every one of those there
are two that are muffed, bungled, or otherwise befumbled! So it’s not a classic
picture, but the concept, “kung-fu sheriff vs. undead, indestructible
psychopath,” is strong enough to paper over some of the stumbles! There’s an
odd quality to the cinematography that I find appealing, and Chuck tries so
hard to emulate human behaviour that it becomes endearing!
It’s a curio mainly, ha ha, and for that it gets
some extra credit, and you can't deny it has the courage of its loopy convictions! But equally you can’t make the claim that it’s a good picture, so on balance I’m
going to give Silent Rage two tragic
dog stories!
I've seen Hellbound! I think it was Cannon's final release. It's not as good as Silent Rage, which should give you some idea of how bad it is.
ReplyDeleteAs I'm researching a hell-related project, I have a feeling I'm going to be seeing it sooner rather than later!
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