From http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m7v80bgyJ01qg9b4bo1_500.jpg |
Dir. Bruno Mattei
Italy
First I will make the confession
that, when dealing with a film that capitalised on the Rambo series, I have only seen Rambo:
First Blood Part II (1985). I liked it on the first viewing, the politics
of the film making it fascinating to scrutinise as well, but on the second
viewing it was a drudge to sit through. It felt like a slog, and to be frank,
for all its explosions and helicopters, I was bored seeing the same Vietcong
being killed on mass in front of the same green trees and rocky waterfalls. In
terms of Vietnam genre cinema, and the macaroni combat sub-genre Bruno Mattei’s film is part of, Italian
made war/WWII/Vietnam films, Strike
Commando is sadly not the film that will win me over at the moment.
From http://s3.amazonaws.com/auteurs_production/images/film/strike-commando/w448/strike-commando.bmp?1326905255 |
With his squadron destroyed by
his own side, Sgt. Mike Ransom (Reb Brown)
is a very angry man, only willing to locate a Russian operated camp in North
Vietnam for the commander who had his men blown up if a Vietnamese village that
rescued him is escorted to safety. As his mission continues however, Ransom
will be pushed into becoming a one man army. The film, not helped by my
complete disinterest in the repetitive jungle sequences, is a pretty bland
action film. Mattei, despite the
lower budget, still manages to make the film look quite good in terms of scope,
but it also never rises about merely being a c-grade action film with an
occasional brightspot. That there are clear similarities to certain sequences
from Rambo: First Blood Part II to
this, despite the differences, makes this blandness worse, the repetition undermining
Strike Commando as one could go and
watch that film instead.
From http://www.videotapeswapshop.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/STRIKE-APOCALYPSE.jpg |
The only thing that interested
me, bar Mattei’s obsession with
characters shouting at each other at the top of their voices, is Reb Brown himself. When he’s able to say
anything that is not grunted machismo or not directly inspired from Rambo, usually screamed at the top of his
voice, I can understand why this is a cult hit amongst some people. The ‘Disneyland’
speech, which should be infamous in the macaroni combat genre, is the
so-bad-its-amusing moment of the film, but the version of the movie I wish I
saw only takes place with Brown’s
final piece of dialogue before the end credits that breaks the fourth wall. The
rest of the film, bar an occasionally amusing moment, is the kind of action
film I am not that interested in, not ridiculous or gaudy enough, neither
unique or spectacular to engage me. The film is just boring and a disappointing
considering how large its reputation in certain cult film circles it is. At
least with something like the American low budget film Deadly Prey (1987), while not being the best of films in existence,
it riffs on the Rambo iconography to
make something barmier as well as distinct.
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