Sweet Johnny-on-a-junk-sheet, it’s Burl,
already back and here to review mid-80s action! Ha ha, here’s a movie I saw in
the theatre, back in the days when I used to bus on downtown and catch anything
that looked the least bit interesting to my teenage self: mid-budget bunberries
like Black Moon Rising, F/X, Dreamscape,
or this one, Remo Williams: The Adventure
Begins…!
And guess who directed it? Ha ha, that’s
right, Guy Hamilton! It seems to be all Hamilton all the time around here, and
the fellow didn’t even direct all that many pictures! This was one of the last
movies he made, and I suppose he got the gig because of his Bond experience,
seeing as how Remo Williams was an
attempt to create a blue collar, meat-and-potatoes all-American version of the
superspy! Ha ha, and from the fact that they made only one Remo Williams
picture, you can guess how it turned out! Performed Below Expectations, as they
say in Hollywood, or at least as they used to say back when there were
expectations!
Fred Ward, that busy actor from Escape From Alcatraz, The Right Stuff, Secret Admirer, UFOria
and of course Summer Catch, was the
slightly unlikely choice to portray this rough-edged hero! He starts out as a
New York cop with a false nose and a black moustache, courtesy I suppose of
Special Makeup Effects man Carl Fullerton, whose work we know from Friday the 13th part 2! This
cop is dumped into the East River, kidnapped and has his face changed by
plastic surgery, all by a secret agency headed by none other than Wilford
Brimley from The Thing, Death Valley and High Road to China! (Ha ha, of all these
outrages, the plastic surgery is the one Remo minds the least!) Then he gets
trained in the ancient art of a made-up martial technique by an even more
heavily made-up Joel Grey, whom we know from Kafka and who plays the role of the Korean chopsman Chiun! Yes,
that’s right, we have a white actor playing a Korean, because I suppose there
were simply no Korean actors who could be hired! I’m sure they looked their
hardest, but the fact that there were simply no Asian actors to be found in the
mid-80s stymied even their best efforts!
Of course I’m being bitterly sarcastic
here! Grey does a fine job in the part, and the makeup is well-done, but the
fact that he’s just some white guy playing an old Korean is a constant,
puzzling distraction, and I remember being puzzled by it even back in 1985! At
least the only other agent in Brimley’s super-secret three-person organization
is played by a genuine actor of colour, namely J.A. Preston from Real Life!
Much of the picture is given over to the
training and the odd-couple relationship between Remo and Chiun, and eating rice and crawling through sand piles like a mole and so forth, but we get
occasional shots of Brimley sitting in the office he never leaves and squinting
concernedly at his computer screen, which shows shots of the picture’s bad guy,
an arms manufacturer played by cold-eyed Charles Cioffi from Klute, whom Remo will eventually get
around to fighting! Others on the bad guy team include crooked general George
Coe from Best Seller; a grinning,
diamond-toothed henchman played by Patrick Kilpatrick from Death Warrant; and stalwart Michael Pataki from The Bat People and Graduation Day!
The only female presence in the picture is
army lady Kate Mulgrew from Star Trek: Nemesis, who discovers discrepancies of
some kind, and is constantly fending off sexist comments and ham-handed pick-up
attempts! She doesn’t get a whole lot to do, however, and it’s left to the
dubious charisma of Remo himself to carry the picture! You’d think maybe the
action scenes would help matters, but they’re either very darkly shot, as in a
long warehouse-based dog-evasion scene; or curiously pep-free, as when Remo
spends the entire climax hanging from a suspended tree! If there’s an action centerpiece
to the picture, it’s the scene on the Statue of Liberty, which they made a big
deal of in the movie’s promotion, as you can see, but which is only a
moderately satisfying sequence!
So the picture was not a success, and the beginning
of Remo’s adventure was also the end (outside of a TV movie or two)! There are
compensations: a few funny lines here and there, some impressive physical feats from Ward, and a parade of familiar faces
in the margins, like Reginald VelJohnson from Die Hard, Jon Polito from Highlander
and William Hickey from The Sentinel!
But for the most part it’s a simple, flat bafaloukas, and I give Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins… one
bowl of rice!
Yet another book adaptation where it's difficult to see what the attraction was for the studio. The Joel Grey casting is often used as a stick to beat this with, but no wonder! Keye Luke was still alive, for example!
ReplyDeleteMako would have been good too!
DeleteI saw this in theatres too. I must have been 14 then and maybe I simply liked it, because I was too young to see it. I remember liking the death of a guy drowning in cement ans the scene wehere Remo uses the diamond tooth of a henchan to cut through glass. But when I tried to rewatch it, it really dragged in the second act, so I didn't finnish it. But I still remember the fanfare that played every time Remo did something spectacular.
ReplyDeleteI was also 14 when I saw this in the theatres! And I certainly agree that there's a lot of wheel-spinning in the second act!
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