Heerlijk nostalgisch: Actiefilms uit de jaren 80/90

Toen ik opgroeide in de jaren 80’ en 90’, de tijd dat we films nog huurden op VHS-tapes bij videotheken, was ik verslaafd aan hersenloze actiefilms. Schwarzenegger, Willis, Stallone, Van Damme en Seagal waren mijn voornaamste helden toen.

Dan was er ook nog de B-klasse waar oa. Dolph Lundgren en Chuck Norris deel van uitmaakte. Of C-klassers zoals Michael Dudikoff (je weet wel. die dude van ‘American Ninja‘). En dan waren er nog Bruce Lee, zijn zoon Brandon Lee, Wesley Snipes, Keanu Reeves, Mel Gibson, Kurt Russell en nog een paar die ik nu vergeet.


Maria Shriver kan hem wel schieten.

De films waren meestal slecht, maar als ze een aantal ingrediënten bevatte was ik blij, namelijk;
1. Een vermakelijke schurk;
2. Minstens om het kwartier een actiescène of moord;
3. Lijken bij bosjes;
4. Humor (eventueel).

Van de week werd mijn lust voor dit genre weer opgewekt door een artikel dat ik las op filmwebsite Empire. Hier worden veel van mijn favoriete actiefilms besproken, zoals ‘Predator’ en ‘Commando’. De meeste hiervan heb ik sinds mijn jeugd nog minstens één keer gezien, maar eentje was ik bijna compleet vergeten. Ik heb het over één van mijn favoriete films uit die tijd. Een film die uitblinkt in stompzinnige actiescènes en explosies, geen verhaal bevat, maar wel enorm slecht acteerwerk. Ik heb het over ‘Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection‘.

Ik kreeg zo’n verschrikkelijke zin om deze film weer te zien, dat ik direct het winkelcentrum ben in gerend om hem aan te schaffen. Bij Intertoys had ik geluk en voor drie miezerige euro’s was ik eigenaar van Delta Force 2, die ook nog eens geleverd werd in een fantastische box, waar ook de toppers ‘Delta Force 1’ en ‘Logan’s War’ bij zaten.

Die tagline! Dat doet gewoon iets met je.

Zo geschiedde. Afgelopen weekend keek ik naar fucking ‘Delta Force 2’. In de eerste ‘Delta Force’ namen Scott McCoy en zijn collega ijzervreters het op tegen Libanese terroristen. In deel 2 zijn de drugskartels in Zuid Amerika aan de beurt. Aan het hoofd hiervan staat de ultieme smeerlap Ramon Cota, die zelfs baby’s laat vermoorden. McCoy weet hem te arresteren, maar hij komt weer vrij en ontvoerd wat DEA collega’s van hem. Tijd voor McCoy’s team om met grof geweld het hele kartel om zeep te helpen. Oh yeah.

Hoe voldoet de film aan de criteria?
1. Goed! Billy Drago (wie? Zie IMDb) speelt een gluiperige drugsbaas, een rol die hem op zijn lijf is geschreven. Veel beter kun je het niet krijgen.
2. De actie zit vooral in de tweede helft, waarin de missie ‘vernietig alles’ plaatsvindt. Zodra de actie arriveert, is het het wachten meer dan waard geweest.
3. Circa 75 lijken. Lang niet slecht dus.
4. Humor zit er ook nog in. Het overdreven Amerikaanse militaire machogedoe lijkt bijna een parodie op zichzelf. Een soort ‘Team America: World Police‘. Vrij hilarisch.

Vrijetijdskleding is niet echt zijn ding.

Tijdens de opname zijn trouwens vijf cast & crewmembers om het leven gekomen bij een helikopterongeluk. GESTORVEN-VOOR-FUCKING-DELTA-FORCE-2!! Maar, het is het zeker waard geweest, mannen. Ik had deze film voor geen goud willen missen. Het gevoel van nostalgie heeft me erg goed gedaan.


And remember kids: Don’t fuck with Chuck!

Zie ook mijn IMDb-lijst: 50 Nostalgic Action Movies From My Childhood – 1980-1993

They Live


‘You see them on the street. You watch them on TV. You might even vote for one this fall. You think they’re people just like you. You’re wrong. Dead wrong.’

Director: John Carpenter
Written by: Ray Nelson (story), John Carpenter
Cast: Roddy Piper, Keith David, Meg Foster, George ‘Buck’ Flower

Year / Country: 1988, USA
Running Time: 90 mins.

The concept for They Live is brilliant. A drifter (wrestler Roddy Piper) discovers an underground movement. When he puts on a pair of sunglasses – produced by this movement, he finds that the world is dominated by an evil alien race. Street signs and television programmes contain hidden messages, such as ‘obey’, ‘buy’ and ‘consume’ and normal people suddenly look like monsters. The whole world is enslaved by these aliens.

The drifter finds a few allies and cooks up a plan to disrupt the alien operations. If they can turn off the signal at the source, the world will have a serious wake-up call. But the aliens are everywhere and they have human accomplices to help them. These humans sold-out their own species in return for promotions and bigger bank accounts.

In this entertaining story, director Carpenter inserted a not-so-well hidden meaning himself. People are only focussed on wealth and making more money. Thus, they are vulnerable to becoming slaves to their own greed. The humans in They Live are sedated and therefore insensitive to their surroundings, only wanting to consume more. The poor have become the unwilling worker bees for the rich.

This message runs through the film, but luckily Carpenter does not take himself too seriously. They Live is above all a fun sci-fi/action thriller with lots of tongue-in-cheek humour. Highlights are Piper’s discovery of the alien conspiracy, a ridiculous wrestling match between Piper and Keith David in an alley and the final minutes in which both aliens and humans get a big surprise.

Rating:

Biography: John Carpenter (1948, New York) was born in Carthage, New York. He attended Western Kentucky University and then USC film school in Los Angeles. While there, he started work on his feature debut Dark Star (1974). Although Carpenter has directed films in numerous other genres (dark comedy, sci-fi, romance), he is known primarily for making horror films: Halloween (1978), The Fog (1980), The Thing (1982), et cetera. He is also known as the ‘Master of Horror’ or the ‘Prince of Darkness’ (after one of his films).

Filmography (a selection): Revenge of the Colossal Beast (1962, short), Gorgo Versus Godzilla (1969, short), Dark Star (1974), Assault on Precinct 13 (1976), Halloween (1978), The Fog (1980), Escape from New York (1981), The Thing (1982), Christine (1983), Starman (1984), Big Trouble in Little China (1986), Prince of Darkness (1987), They Live (1988), Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992), In the Mouth of Madness (1994), Village of the Damned (1995), Escape from L.A. (1996), Vampires (1998), Ghosts of Mars (2001)

Pulp Fiction (1994)


‘Girls like me don’t make invitations like this to just anyone!’

Directed by:
Quentin Tarantino

Written by:
Quentin Tarantino (stories / screenplay)
Roger Avary (stories)

Cast:
John Travolta (Vincent Vega), Samuel L. Jackson (Jules Winnfield), Uma Thurman (Mia Wallace), Tim Roth (Pumpkin), Amanda Plummer (Honey Bunny), Bruce Willis (Butch Coolidge), Ving Rhames (Marsellus Wallace), Eric Stoltz (Lance), Rosanna Arquette (Jody), Harvey Keitel (Winston Wolf)

After Quentin Tarantino’s insanely cool debut in 1992, Reservoir Dogs – which he wrote and directed – the expectations of him in movieland were quite high. Two years later he delivered. When Pulp Fiction premièred at Cannes in 1994, they didn’t know what hit them. Tarantino’s L.A.-based crime opus, inspired by the Black Mask pulp magazine, blew them all away.

The three intersecting stories that are told non-chronologically in Pulp Fiction are all amazing in their own way. The first one about two hitmen Vincent Vega (John Travolta) and Jules Winnfield (Samuel L. Jackson) that have to dispose of a headless body and blood-soaked car is both mean and hysterical. The second one in which Vega takes gangster boss Marcellus Wallace’s wife Mia (Uma Thurman) out on a date (“it’s not a date!”) is druggy, cool, sensual and exciting. The third story about boxer Butch (Bruce Willis) who swindles Marcellus Wallace is romantic, ironic and twisted. The whole plot is tied together by a crazy short about a young couple in love who decide to rob the restaurant they are having breakfast in.Whether a person knows about movies or not, it is hard to miss that this is an amazingly clever movie. The screenplay is out of this world and so is the cast (5 million dollars of the 8 million budget went to the cast). The non-chronological structure to which Tarantino holds the patent is never done better. And although not his most mature, the dialogues about foot massages, piercings, TV-pilots and uncomfortable silences are unforgettable. Especially the exchanges between Vega and Winnfield are absolutely hilarious.

Of course, this being Tarantino’s early masterpiece, it contains a trainload of movie references. One could even call it his ultimate homage to cinema. But what makes it richer and cleverer than just a highly entertaining crime flick stuffed with pop-culture dialogues and references, is the biblical thread that runs through it. It is truly remarkable how the separate stories intertwine and destiny comes into play the whole time. For example, Butch and Marcellus Wallace walk into the most terrible place on earth, but it does put them square in the end. And what becomes a life changing event for Winnfield, is ignored by Vega for whom things soon end badly. All the characters get a lesson in some sort of way. Some get a second chance and some don’t. The viewer can keep looking into this and discover new things all the time. In this respect, the screenwriters did a wonderful job and justly won an Oscar for it.

The nineties was a glorious time for cinema, when surprises like Pulp Fiction would still appear once in a while. Although, we can only hope for this period to return, we can also re-live the beautiful movie experiences from the past. Like the content of the mysterious briefcase in the movie, Pulp Fiction is a treasure that will undoubtedly still be viewed and honored long into the future.

Rating:

Quote:
JULES:  “Marcellus Wallace don’t like to be fucked by anybody except Mrs. Wallace.”

Trivia:
Samuel L. Jackson auditioned for the part of Mr. Orange in Reservoir Dogs (1992), but it went to Tim Roth. Tarantino enjoyed Jackson’s work so much that he wrote the part of Jules specifically for him.

The Godfather: Part III (1990)


‘All the power on earth can’t change destiny.’

Directed by:
Francis Ford Coppola

Written by:
Mario Puzo (screenplay)
Francis Ford Coppola (screenplay)

Cast:
Al Pacino (Don Michael Corleone), Diane Keaton (Kay Adams Michelson), Talia Shire (Connie Corleone Rizzi), Andy Garcia (Vincent Mancini), Eli Wallach (Don Altobello), Joe Mantegna (Joey Zasa), George Hamilton (B.J. Harrison), Bridget Fonda (Grace Hamilton), Sofia Coppola (Mary Corleone), Raf Vallone (Cardinal Lamberto)

Just when you thought you were out, they pull you back in! 18 years after the original masterpiece, Francis Ford Coppola and many of his old collaborators return for the finale of the Godfather saga. The studio was screaming for a sequel for years, but Coppola waited until he had a story he really wanted to tell. Originally he wanted to call this story; ‘The Death of Michael Corleone’.

Part III is the story of an old Don looking for redemption. Michael Corleone is no longer a gangster; he is the chairman of a corporation. He has finally achieved legitimacy, but his heart is ever heavy. This is a man getting ready for death, but he wonders if he made the right decisions in life. In Part II he had his brother Fredo killed. Now, he wants to make things right with his ex-wife Kay, his children and with God.

Redemption does not come cheap. In the deal of his lifetime, Michael wants to purchase shares in a large real estate company, owned by the Vatican, for the sum of 600 million dollars. But he soon learns that the higher he gets, the dirtier it gets. In The Godfather: Part III, the hypocrisy of the mob, the Catholic Church and big business mix perfectly. Michael feels like he can’t deal with these snakes anymore; he needs a successor. His own son Anthony won’t have anything to do with his business, but perhaps his nephew Vincent (Andy Garcia) could be the one. Or is he too much of a hothead like his father Sonny?

Like the previous Godfather films, The Godfather: Part III opens with a lavish celebration – a fitting introduction that reintroduces familiar faces while showcasing new ones. It’s a promising start, but it also highlights the film’s most significant flaw. Francis Ford Coppola cast his daughter, Sofia Coppola, as Mary, Michael Corleone’s daughter. Unfortunately, she doesn’t quite fit the role. It’s not that her acting is utterly terrible, but she lacks the presence and nuance needed for such a pivotal character. Her on-screen romance with Vincent, in particular, feels forced and unconvincing, weakening an already delicate subplot.

Despite its flaws, Coppola demonstrates once again that he knows how to craft a compelling narrative. While Sofia Coppola’s performance may undercut the impact of some key scenes, they are still powerful scenes. The beloved characters we’ve followed throughout the saga each receive fitting and meaningful conclusions. The strong sense of family – a hallmark of the series – endures, lending the film its emotional core. The cast, for the most part, is outstanding. Al Pacino brings a Shakespearean weight to Michael, portraying him as a deeply tragic figure. Andy Garcia proves to be as fierce and magnetic a presence as James Caan was in the first film. Meanwhile, Talia Shire, Diane Keaton, and Eli Wallach all deliver touching and memorable performances in their supporting roles.

The final act that plays at an opera house is one of cinematic excellence. The combination of classic Sicilian opera, the traditional bloody settling of the Corleone affairs and the ultimate tragedy that unfolds is a sequence worthy of comparison to earlier Godfather-endings. The final frames are, as always in Godfather movies, beautiful. It is hard not to shed a few tears as Michael looks back on the women of his life and then dies.

Rating:

Quote:

KAY ADAMS: I came here to protect my son. I didn’t come here to see you disguised by your church. I thought that was a shameful ceremony.

Trivia:

Catherine Scorsese, Director Martin Scorsese’s mother, is one of the women that complains to Vincent in the street about the poor care of the neighbourhood. In the same year, she also appeared in her own son’s gangster film GoodFellas.