Can Any Action Hero Ever Live up to the Legacy of Harrison Ford?

Harrison Ford is responsible for two of the coolest characters ever portrayed on screen – Indiana Jones and Hans Solo. He was the go-to action star for some of Hollywood’s top directors in the 1980s and 1990s, and the legacy of his performances still lives on in the popular culture of today. Many of the modern age’s upcoming action stars have been clearly inspired by Ford, and often try to channel his immense energy in their own roles.

India Jones Continues to Have an Impact on Popular Culture

The Indiana Jones series, originally created by George Lucas, is still up there with the greatest films of all time. The franchise helped to put both Ford and Steven Spielberg on the map. The first time viewers were ever treated to an outing with the iconic archeologist was in 1981 in Raiders of the Lost Ark, which is considered to be one of the most influential films ever made.

It’s clear that the Indiana Jones imprint still lives on in the popular culture of today, with numerous games inspired by the incredible character. For instance, there are console series like Tomb Raider and Uncharted that draw a great many parallels with Lucas’s blockbusters.

The impact can also be seen in other areas of gaming, such as the online casino industry, more specifically, within the online slots arena. At Mr Green, for example, one of the main games advertised on the site is Rich Wilde and the Book of Dead. The character has been described as an “Indiana Jones-like adventurer” and there has also been a spinoff called Cat Wilde and the Doom of the Dead. Games like these can capitalize on the popularity of Ford’s character, without directly ripping it off.

Ford Responsible for Some of the Greatest Action Roles of All Time

Although Star Wars was primarily an epic space opera, it also had plenty of action elements. To bring those to screen, Ford was the perfect casting choice for Solo. Not only was he rough and ready, but he could also inject humorous lines when they were required.

It’s not just the two Lucas franchises that cemented Ford’s status as one of the greatest action megastars of the era, though. He also starred in a wide range of other incredibly popular and successful movies. These included the likes of The Fugitive, Blade Runner, Air Force One, and Witness. According to Gold Derby, his part in the latter was his second-best performance ever.

Modern Day Actors are Clearly Inspired by Ford

There’s no doubt that Ford’s legacy is living on through current Hollywood stars such as Chris Pratt. Particularly in action franchises like the Jurassic World films, Pratt’s portrayal drew comparisons with Indiana Jones.

According to Variety, the Guardians of the Galaxy actor has even been linked with the Indiana Jones franchise in the past. Another actor who draws some comparisons to Ford is Ryan Reynolds, who has taken on some great action roles recently in titles like Red Notice.

There’s no doubt that Ford is one of the greatest action stars ever, and his acting roles continue to impact the entertainment industry to this day. In terms of leaving a legacy, there are few others who can get close to him.

Accident Man: Hitman’s Holiday — New Key Art and Release Date

Everything we know about Scott Adkins and the new Accident Man film.

In 2018, the world of indie action films was turned upside down when a small movie, called Accident Man starring Scott Adkins, was released. For months, fans pondered whether a sequel would be greenlit.

In late 2019, Adkins confirmed work on sequel on his social media. However, in 2020, the cursed pandemic put a halt on everything. Fans wondered if the upcoming sequel would ever see the light of day.

In October/November 2021, those worries were put to rest as Adkins posted on his social media that he was on set for filming what was then simply titled Accident Man 2. Last weekend, we were shocked to discover that the film, now known as Accident Man: Hitman’s Holiday had new key art as well as a release date!!!! 

Accident Man: Scott Adkins as a Comicbook Action Hero

Synopsis For Accident Man: Hitman’s Holiday

“The Accident Man, is back and this time he must best the top assassins in the world, to protect the ungrateful son of a mafia boss, save the life of his only friend and rekindle his relationship with his maniacal father figure.” -IMDB

The new key art shows returning characters Mike Fallon (Adkins) front and center. Also returning are Ray Stevenson as Big Ray and Perry Benson as Finnicky Fred. New characters shown include Poco The Killer Clown (Beau Fowler), Oyumi (Andy Long), Wong Siu-Ling (Sarah Chang), and Yendi (Faisal Mohammed).

As of the writing of this, we have no trailer, but according to Adkins’ Instagram post, the film will be released on October 14th, and you can bet your sweet money that I’ll be first in line to buy my copy.

Let’s hope this is only the beginning for Mike Fallon and we can get maybe one or two more installments of Accident Man, but in the meantime, you can keep your eyes peeled right here on UAMC for all things, Adkins, Accident Man, and more!!!!!

Top 10 Scott Adkins Action Movies

Gary Daniels Brings the Indie Action Drama in ‘Bring Him Back Dead’ (2022)

A look at Gary Daniels’ latest foray into indie crime drama.

If you were anything like me in the 90s then one thing is for sure. You ate up all of the DTV actions that came out in that time period. One of the more successful names to come out of the craze was one Gary Daniels, a martial artist from Great Britain who had his eyes set on the world of martial arts films.

It pleasures me to see him still remaining active (albeit at a slower pace) in the industry. Today we’re here to talk about his latest entry, the indie action drama Bring Him Back Dead.

Top 10 Gary Daniels Action Movies

Bring Him Back Dead Review

Synopsis: A violent gang of criminals is ordered, after a botched heist, to track down and eliminate the man who betrayed them and ran off with their loot.

Daniels plays Alex, a getaway driver for a group of diamond thieves. After meeting back up with the leader, Trent (played by Louis Mandylor), we discover that Alex is caught up doing the wrong things for the right reasons as his kid is sick and in the hospital. 

But How Ultimate is it?

The film is a more dramatic piece and the action sadly suffers from budget constraints, to the point where Daniels himself has acknowledged the fact. However, the film is still very much enjoyable at face value. There is quite a bit of humor and it tells a human story as it relates to an everyday struggle that many parents face.

Overall, even with the lack of action, I would still rate this film a 5/10 due to its relatable characters and the humor that comes out throughout the film. “Bring Him Back Dead” is currently available on digital platforms for streaming. Keep it locked here on UAMC for all things Gary Daniels and all other things action!!!!!

How Is Brad Pitt Following in the Foot Steps of 80’s and 90’s Action Actors?

2022 has been a good year for movies so far. The new releases by Marvel have been met with open arms, the likes of Nope and Black Phone have satisfied the horror audience and now, with Bullet Train, anyone who likes high octane action movies is reasonably happy too. Sure, the film has its flaws, but all in all the movie is action packed, a lot of fun and is carried by its A-list frontman, Brad Pitt. In performing so well in this film, has Pitt managed to cement himself as one of the best action actors of all time? It may well be the case and he has done this by following in the footsteps of some of the great action actors for the 80’s and 90’s.  

All About Brad

Pitt was born in 1963 in Oklahoma and right from the off had humble beginnings. His father owned his own trucking company and his mum worked as a family counsellor. Brad had a love of movies from a young age and as such, decided to pursue a career on the big screen. In doing so he has managed to act in a range of different roles in a range of different movies from Moneyball to Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. 

Pitt still lives a fairly humble life despite his success and one of his favourite hobbies is gambling. He actually picked it up from playing on slot machines in between breaks of the classic movie Oceans Eleven. Since then he has enjoyed gambling in his spare time. It’s unclear whether he likes the atmosphere of the casino or if he does a lot of his gambling in the privacy of his own home these days, although if it was the latter he would have plenty of options. 

Thanks to how much the gambling industry has grown in recent years, there are a huge range of websites available for people to use. These sites vary depending on the state you are in and as such, depending on where in the US you are, it could be worth consulting the comparison sites that put local casinos against one another and conveys to you which offer different things. Sites like this exist for every state where gambling is legal, for instance, this one is for Pennsylvania but there are options all over the country. 

Standing On the Shoulders of Giants

As we have seen countless times before and once again in the new release Bullet Train, Brad Pitt is more than capable of taking on a role that revolves around an action-packed script. There are a number of elements that go into making a good actor but with Brad Pitt, one of the things that allows him to resonate so much in action movies is his immediate likeability. He manages to carry himself with an air of humble confidence and when this is done right, it means that people will root for you a lot more on screen. 

In doing this Brad follows in the footsteps of a number of excellent action actors who found their fame in the 80’s and 90’s. In the same way that Kurt Russell does when he plays Jack Burton in Big Trouble in Little China, or like when Sylvester Stallone shows why he isn’t one to be messed with in Rambo, Pitt manages to convey a cool confidence that means you feel safe with him even when the odds are stacked the other way. This kind of kickass nature was originally cemented in Hollywood back in the 80’s and 90’s when action movies really managed to find their feet. Now, when we see Brad Pitt take to the screen in the likes of Bullet Train, his acting performance is clearly one that resonates with such legends. 

Brad Pitt’s Action Influences

Brad Pitt is from very humble beginnings but possessed a love of film from a young age that left him longing for the bright lights of Hollywood. He has since cemented himself as an A-lister and is respected by fans and critics alike. He manages to excel in action movie roles thanks to a humble confidence that he carries with him well, as is seen in his recent film Bullet Train. This style of acting is one where the foundation was set by action stars in the 80’s and 90’s such as Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone and Kurt Russel. Brad Pitt is currently building on top of that foundation to entertain audiences around the world. 

Barb Wire (1996): Pamela Anderson’s Wild, Silly and Sexy Ultimate Actioner

A film which still oozes with ’90s Punk Rock Industrial Dystopia!

Pamela Anderson tried to diversify her acting activities beyond Baywatch into the movie business, and Barb Wire was supposed to help her make a big step in this direction. The film was based on a Dark Horse comic series, and it came at the right time. The 1990s secretly were the golden decade of comic book movies after all with eternal classics such as Blade, The Crow, Judge Dredd and Tank Girl. Alas, Barb Wire was mercilessly shredded by critics, tanked at the box office, and closed the chapter of a high-profile movie career for Anderson. But at least she gave us a wild and sexy actioner, that we’ll examine in this article!

In 2017, the US is ravaged by the Second Civil War. Barb Wire makes a living as bar owner and bounty hunter in the last free city, Steel Harbor. Her ex-lover and former brother in arms walks into her establishment one day with secret information about a devastating bio-weapon, and seeks her aid with escaping to Canada. Wire agrees to help, and gets caught in a crossfire between criminal gangs, the police and a government torture squad.

The Taking of Beverly Hills: Silly Kick-Ass Action Done Right

If one more person calls me babe…

I guess there are two ways to watch this film: the first one is to enjoy Anderson’s lascivious outfits and poses. Now that I’m a bit older I can resist my primal urges from time to time, so we go with the second approach: enjoy it as an action film. The oversexed opening sequence and a weird torture scene with an orgasm machine shortly thereafter will make you wonder if we have descended into lowest realms of exploitation cinema. The film thankfully turns around quickly, and becomes a lot more watchable.

Barb Wire shares some similarities with Casablanca, but this is really not an important aspect, as both films couldn’t be more different in pretty much everything except a few common plot hooks. If you’re watching the film for Anderson’s cleavage, you can switch it off safely after the first five minutes, there are no sex scenes and only very occasional half-nudity after that. She retains her sex appeal throughout the film, but this is not the only thing she brings to the table. Her character is a legitimate bad-ass heroine, who is surrounded by misogynistic men. Thankfully she violently disposes of them whenever the opportunity arises.

‘Anna’ and the Resurgence of the Badass Women of Action

Sexist? Feminist? Bad-Ass Demolitionist!

All other female characters are equally strong, and most of the male protagonists are power- or money-hungry crooks. Barb Wire is miles away from Tank Girl‘s (at the time) radical feminist stance, but there is a certain ambiguity in her character which makes it interesting. Is the film sexist, feminist, or something else altogether? I say decide for yourself.

Anderson’s performance is not Oscar-worthy, but she’s doing a pretty good job at being a tough action hero, and her earnestness makes delivery of the numerous cheesy one-liners all the more compelling. And bad acting never prevented us from hailing the likes of Van Damme and Seagal for their performances.  The supporting cast is pretty awesome too, composed of actors graced with this charisma and looks that are perfect for comic-book adaptations: Steve Railsback, Clint Howard, Xander Berkeley, and above all Udo Kier, who is as charming and mysterious as ever.

Teensplotation Meets Action on the Savage Streets (1984)

I will rip your heart out of your ass and stuff it back down your throat!

Barb Wire‘s Punk Rock Industrial dystopia oozes what we now can describe as typical 1990s comic book movie vibe with low-key lighting, lots of Dutch angles and eccentric costume design.

Some funky cybertech gimmickry like dream- and thought-reading machines, retinal scans and digital hygiene cards for prostitutes round off the campy vibe. The film is crafted very well, with great costumes, atmospheric locations, and a stylish cinematography in the action sequences. Even the plot is not that bad, and the action is not just an end in itself, but properly embedded into the story.

The film is admittedly a bit sparse on big action set pieces until the big finale, but has a few shootouts and brawls in its first hour. When Wire’s bar is descended on by the police, we learn that in the future a search warrant means you bring in a squad of brutes with sledgehammers for a thorough investigation. Anderson’s physical performance is impressive – with lots of shooting and punching – considering she does everything with four inch high heels and a tight corset. The final showdown is 35 minutes of vehicular carnage and explosions, with the apex being a crazy fight on a forklift that is dangling on a crane 300 feet above ground.

Barb Wire is how I like my comic book movies: silly, violent and action-packed!

“DOUBLE CROSS” UPDATES: 2nd Block concludes and Behind the Scenes Sneak Peek

TKO Productions recently just concluded its second block of filming for its debut feature film, the action-packed “Double Cross”.

Focusing on getting in as many of the action scenes as we could, I do believe it was a success.

The first scene we focused on was a fight scene of the two brothers (portrayed by myself and Blake Longshore) getting ambushed in a warehouse and us cleaning house in an epic showdown which turned into 2 separate 1-v-2 fights. Next, we went into a showdown between the two brothers which showed just how even matched they are in terms of skill, but shows the different mindsets of the two.

Last we worked on a very John Wick-esque home invasion fight scene with gunplay as well as fisticuffs.

Overall, this block of filming was very fun and very fulfilling to complete. We had the help of 5 stunt people without whom this movie would be a disaster. This film promises to set a new standard on how indie action movies are made.

Be on the lookout for our first teaser trailer expected to drop in the coming weeks, but in the meantime I hope you enjoy this look behind the scenes of the action masterpiece!

“Double Cross” stars Braden D. White, Blake Longshore, Ethic DeJaun, Temre K. Morgan, Amielynn Woodall, and Craig Blacklock

Directed by David H. Feguson

Produced by Braden D. White, Robb Antequera, and Dayna Kay White

Fascinations Galore: Analyzing the Main Title Sequence of ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’

Released in December 1997, Pierce Brosnan’s second James Bond outing Tomorrow Never Dies dealt with the use of mass media and technology as deadly weapons. The plot was less political, intricate and suspenseful than Brosnan’s Bond debut GoldenEye in 1995. Nevertheless, Roger Spottiswoode’s film is an intense, dynamic and highly entertaining production that follows the 007 formula quite closely and adapts it to the late 1990s.

The main themes of the movie are quite relevant, twenty-five years on: how many times have we felt there is “something” behind those media barons? Tomorrow Never Dies delivers exactly this: Elliot Carver (Jonathan Pryce), a media tycoon plotting to provoke a war between the United Kingdom and China to gain exclusive broadcast rights in the most populated country in the world, for which he executes the sinking of a British warship and steals a cruise missile from its remains before trying to launch it over Beijing.

All of these themes are interestingly blended in Daniel Kleinman’s main title sequence for Tomorrow Never Dies, over Sheryl Crow’s main title song –written by Mitchell Froom and nominated for a Golden Globe award– which seems to be written from the perspective of the ill-fated Paris Carver (Teri Hatcher), the villain’s wife and former girlfriend of Bond.

Right after Bond avoids a catastrophe that would make “Chernobyl look like picnic” on the Russian border, he activates the afterburner of the MiG jet he pilots. The afterburner’s fire causes the screen to shatter like glass – like the glass of a television screen. The rest of the sequence will take us inside a sort of cyberspace, what is inside “the box”: we fly through beams of light, programming codes, and a succession of different screens showing footage from news archives. None of them can be clearly seen, but the one that particularly stands out when freeze-framing belongs to a tank going through the streets of China in 1989, during the Tiananmen massacre: a confrontation between armed forces and civilians. Could this be a projection of Carver’s plan succeeding as well? A post-war massacre leading to the de facto government of his associate General Chang, the Red Army officer that guaranteed him the coveted “exclusive broadcasting rights” if he rose to power?

It’s not curious that this image is the only one that is clearly (or almost clearly) visible during these rapid flashes of news footage, which represents the idea of the news as a man-made “fabrication”. Never forget that, while these events did happen, the news is reported from a perspective and a man with a camera –and a whole team behind him– decide what to show and what to hide: in other words, how to emphasize drama and tension to provoke an emotion in the viewer. This is particularly noticeable in wars. Carver himself, in the film, changes the headlines of an event he staged from “British sailors killed” to “British sailors murdered” to create a stir in public opinion.

As the image liquefies, representing the liquid crystal behind a TV screen, we see silhouettes lying on a transparent floor, behind a white roof. On closer inspection, these are naked girls, but they could resemble insects or cockroaches at a glance. Just like the black-and-white illustrations shown by psychiatrists to their patients. Cockroaches are perceived as disgusting and dirty, and women as beautiful and clean. Two opposite things are equalled by the magic of television. The production of a TV show can alter how people look in real life: younger, fitter, prettier.

And with that, Sheryl Crow performs the first sentence in the song: “Darling, I’m killed”. This way, the American singer anticipates that she talks from the perspective of a woman who speaks from beneath the grave. A woman that has been murdered: she says “I’m killed”, instead of “I’m dead”. Paris Carver is killed for betraying her husband by Doctor Kaufman. Crow continues: “I’m in a puddle on the floor, waiting for you to return”. Paris approaches Bond –who had a minor confrontation with Carver’s goons– and both have a romantic interlude, in which she reveals to him how to sneak into her husband’s offices in Hamburg. As a consequence of this, when Bond returns to his hotel room after the job is done, he finds her dead body. These initial verses can be interpreted as Paris giving an omniscient view of things, waiting for Bond’s return to find her (or her body, in this case).

Kleinman teases us with some of Bond’s tools of the trade: his Omega watch and his Walther PPK handgun go through an x-ray filter, so we can see the mechanism of both. Paris can now see beyond things since she’s no longer with us. She can see beyond Bond, beyond the objects that identify him so much, almost as an extension of his body. From another point of view, the x-rays can be an analogy to Elliot Carver’s reach: technology allows him to reach the unreachable side of things, and he can also see “beyond” what Bond apparently is: due to a slip-up by Paris, the media mogul finds out 007 may not be a banker and uses his technology advisor to do a check-up on his cover story, concluding he is a government agent. This man, Henry Gupta (Ricky Jay) uses a security camera and isolates the ambient sound, detecting a conversation between Bond and Paris during Carver’s inaugural party: “Do you still sleep with a gun under your pillow?”. This will prove fatal to Paris, but it also proves how far the villains can reach with the use of their advanced technology. They can see beyond what we perceive.

 “Oh, what a thrill. Fascinations galore. How you tease, how you leave me to burn.” Paris allows herself an irony on Bond’s cavalier attitudes he had in the past. Long before she married, they shared some happy times, but 007 couldn’t tolerate the burden of a relationship. So, he said “I’ll be right back” and disappeared. In this life, she was broken-hearted by this attitude. Now, in the afterlife, she is beyond this and takes it as “a thrill”.

Seen again through an x-ray filter, the bullets are loaded in the magazine of a Walther PPK magazine. Inside the bullets, girls are dancing. A female hand cocks and holds the weapon, but she doesn’t shoot. She just turns around and leaves, fading away. Paris forgives and just disappears, maybe?

The animations move to a red circuit board, where the face of a woman begins to morph. The Missouri-born performer sings: “It’s so deadly, my dear, the power of having you near” and Paris acknowledges that having Bond close to her was something intense but dangerous. And so, the circuit boards become three-dimensional, taking the shape of a hairless, voluptuous, robotic woman. It is only when screens pass through her that her face becomes sculpted and strands of her hair wave through the air. Television, one of the villain’s many weapons (“Words are the new weapons, satellites the new artillery”), delivers what the consumer is looking for, what is commercially attractive: pieces of circuit boards, insipid and unattractive technological “junk” are shaped into sexy-looking girls, whose beauty is enhanced –or fabricated– thanks to the magic of entertainment.

“Until that day, until the world falls away. Until you see there’ll be no more goodbyes.” Paris warns Bond about an inevitable doom: the day the world will implode. The hero, Bond, is among the living, a man of this world, a warrior in this battle. He cares about the world’s safety. The villain, Carver, wants to cause havoc and destruction with his headlines and weapons to increase his power and wealth. Paris, the object of desire between the two, is among the dead and far of these men with their earthly problems. She sees the world will eventually destroy itself and alerts Bond of a day where there will be “no more goodbyes”, where it will be too late for everything. “I see it in your eyes… tomorrow never dies”. For Bond, there is always a tomorrow. Paris, however, is in a timeless place where the cares of mortals are small and irrelevant.

The main title graphics show a woman walking through a white background, where several weapons are displayed: the Walther PPK, a Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine gun, an M16 assault rifle and a Fairbairn-Sykes knife, all through the x-ray filter. This silhouetted woman fires a shot from a digitalized blue PPK, which destroys different TV screens and anticipates Bond’s victory over the villain’s mischievous plan and his empire.

“Darling you’ve won, it’s no fun. Martinis, girls and guns, it’s murder on our love affair. But you bet your life, every night, while you’re chasing the morning light. You’re not the only spy out there”. Crow sings this after the TV screens have been broken. Smoke –resembling a dancing girl– steam from the muzzle of a PPK. The mouth of another woman blows it away.

This represents that Bond has triumphed over Carver (“Darling you’ve won”), yet Paris is not necessarily impressed now (“It’s no fun”), because this partially happened at the cost of her life. She complains about Bond’s antics. We will hear later in the film that she tells him that his job “is murder on relationships”, but in this thoughts from the afterlife, she makes it extensive to Bond’s popular lifestyle, which is “martinis, girls and guns”, his vices and tools. The title animations deal with two of these elements: girls and guns, the expensive watch replacing the Martini, in this case. Paris diminishes Bond’s doings as the actions of someone who “bets his life” while “chasing the morning light”: the quest for an impossible ideal, a world order that will never exist. She emphasizes that he is not the only one doing the same job, therefore not some kind of a saviour. This vision contradicts the concept we have of James Bond: someone who will save the world. But it’s necessary to remind that Paris is beyond all that, she looks at the events from out of the picture, which grants her a different perspective: she can see that 007’s doings, on a large scale, won’t change much; and that he could have left this to others and stayed with her.

As the main titles come to a close, the robotic girl appears and Kleinman passes three screens around her body: one of them is about to pass through her breasts, but disappears right before it shows an intimate part of the female anatomy. The teasing of television and entertainment, of which James Bond itself (not as a character, but as a product) has dealt with for decades: we never see nudity in the films to ensure a PG-13 rating, but there is always enough skin to show in a girl to make it appealing to a male audience: sex scenes in the franchise are generally suggested through post-coital moments and Bond’s arms or a blanket are always covering the intimate parts of a girl.

Regarding the song, previous verses are repeated. But this time, Crow (or Paris) makes a switch in an earlier sentence: “It’s so deadly, my dear, the power of wanting you near”, instead of having. The song started with Paris talking about having Bond close, now she talks about wanting him, because they are apart: he’s alive, she’s dead.

Crow repeats the chorus (“Until that day, until the world falls away…”), and we see a close-up of one of the circuit-board girls: the screen passes in front of her face, morphing her into a beautiful, hazel-eyed blonde girl with a diamond necklace. The diamonds detach from her neck and expand from each other, becoming satellites to her face. As the picture darkens and a night sky is used as the background, a bright moon emerges from behind the girl’s head. The singer performs “Until you’ll see there’ll be no more goodbyes”, and a naked girl standing on one of these diamonds jumps away as if a swimming pool was below her. The camera follows her body as she falls through cyberspace, arms wide open, surrendering and immersing herself in this attractive, fabricated, somewhat exaggerated world.

Between blue rays, static and lights, she heads right to another TV screen where the face of a suggestive brunette can be seen. She submerges on the liquid screen, between the eyes of the girl on the screen.

We understand that when Bond ditched her before the events of the film, Paris was attracted to Carver’s wealth and charisma but deep inside she didn’t feel comfortable with this and she ended up being a mere decorative element of a powerful man. When she reencounters and makes passionate love with 007, he delicately undresses her, letting her Ocimar Versolato black fall to the floor in a tide of passion, he is stripping her from a false illusion of happiness and recovering her former self: initially, she tried to show Bond that she has moved up in the world and that she made her bed and he won’t sleep on it anymore; however, Bond makes her feel like a woman again through passionate, caring sex: “I missed you,” she sighs. Therefore, this naked girl jumping to another TV screen serves as an analogy to a spectacular, visually attractive doom: getting reacquainted with Bond led her to her death, but a life with Carver was like a masqueraded, spectacular living death: a slow, silent death through the extravagance of mass media and visual effects.

After ordering her assassination, Carver pretends to camouflage the murder framing Paris as a victim of “foul play”, killed by another man who committed suicide with a self-inflicted gunshot. Bond was supposed to be that man, had Dr Kaufman succeeded in killing him, but a cleverer 007 eventually made him the protagonist of that forged story.

The sequence fades to black and we get the director’s credit over the first shot of the resumed film, the HMS Devonshire sailing through the South China Sea.

Some see Tomorrow Never Dies as a fantastic James Bond film that interpreted the classic formula better than any of the films that followed it; others see it as a downgrade from the elaborated plot of GoldenEye and the sharpness of its action sequences and twists. Still, it is hard to deny that it is one of the most entertaining and re-watchable Bond films in the past decades. And considering the relevance of the themes dealt with in the story, Tomorrow Never Dies deserves a closer look with each passing year.

Red Scorpion: The Ultimate One-Man Army vs. Communism Actioner

One of Dolph Lundgren’s most over-the-top and high-octane action romps.

The 1980s saw a glut of cold-war themed action movies, and Red Scorpion closed out the decade with a bang. The film was the last entry to director Joseph Zito’s unofficial Reagan-era trilogy that started with the Chuck Norris classics Missing in Action and Invasion USA. For Red Scorpion, he teamed up with rising star Dolph Lundgren. After Rocky IV, Lundgren again portrayed a Russian, but this time he sees the light and becomes a muscle-packed killing machine for the forces of good!

Spetznaz operative Nikolai is sent to an African country to assassinate a local rebel leader. Arriving there, he witnesses the atrocities committed by the Soviet military and their Cuban allies. He discovers his conscience, switches sides, and the show is on! During the cold war, the Soviets got a foothold in some African countries, and the film utilizes this backdrop to provide a unique setting for an action film of its decade.

Top 10 Dolph Lundgren Action Movies

You are Spetsnaz, a perfect killing machine!

Lundgren impresses with a seriously bad-ass hair cut, and oiled muscles that shine brightly under the desert sun. As always, he delivers a physically compelling performance, talking less than John Rambo, yet never short of a cheesy one-liner. Nikolai is a man of action who does not like to overthink situations, and his first choice to resolve every situation is brute force. His stoic demeanor is contrasted by the chatty character of war reporter Ferguson, who is portrayed by the inimitable M. Emmet Walsh. He gets half the dialogue of the entire movie, which he spends mostly ranting and cursing.

The great Brion James is a bit underutilized as Russian colonel, but gets to indulge in some good old evilness. Watch out for the scene when he switches on Ferguson’s confiscated tape recorder which to his surprise and anger plays imperialist Rock’n’Roll. He then gets some stress relief by slowly putting out his cigar on the chest of the imprisoned Ferguson.

Castle Falls: Dolph Lundgren Casts Himself Against Scott Adkins

An Ultimate One-Man Army vs. Communism Experience

The film’s unapologetic pathos, the cartoonish characters and their cheesy dialogues all work together nicely, and the old-school action bingo card is completed by the many wonderfully destructive action sequences. Red Scorpion has everything what an action fan’s heart desires: huge weapons, massive explosions, car chases in the desert, and a good chunk of bloody hand-to-hand violence. The lost art of making vehicles explode by firing at them with a shotgun from 100 feet away is also practiced multiple times. The film would not be complete without a torture scene where a Cuban interrogator rejoices in his job while the pitiable recording secretary has to sit in the back and watch.

The film’s first part is fast-paced, but things come to a complete halt when Nicolai gets rescued from dying in the desert by a by a bush tribe. He learns their ways, and as a farewell gift gets imbued with the mystical powers of the red scorpion. While there’s nothing wrong with a kitschy and goofy interlude of this kind, the whole thing is just too long, and could have been trimmed easily by ten minutes. After Nikolai returns from the desert spiritually renewed, the big finale starts abruptly, and we’re in the middle of a massive assault on the Soviet/Cuban military compound. It’s a beautiful orgy of pyrotechnics and destruction that ends just as abruptly as it began.

Red Scorpion goes completely over the top with its clumsy moralizing and high-octane action. Few other films can satisfy this archaic joy of seeing lots of things explode, again and again. It is one of the ultimate one-man army vs. communism actioners.

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Tron: Visionary Digital Effects Meet Ultimate Family Entertainment

Let’s explore how the ultimate legacy of the original Tron holds up today.

What a year 1982 was for the Science Fiction movie genre with films like Blade Runner, The Thing, E.T., and Tron! All of them were groundbreaking in their own right, and Tron took on the task to create an action-packed journey into the world of computer programs and microprocessors. Steven Lisberger developed his brainchild for many years, until it got picked up by Disney who had the big money to help him realize his vision. 1980s culture is in full revival, and interest in Tron has seen a resurgence, so let’s check out how it holds up today!

Video game programmer Flynn left his employer ENCOM in frustration, after his creations were stolen by his dastard co-worker Dillinger. He tries to hack into the ENCOM network, but keeps getting beaten by the company’s artificial intelligence, the Master Control Program (MCP). When Flynn tries to access the system from the inside, The MCP detects him, and he gets digitized into the  mainframe. In the cyberspace, Flynn is forced to fight for his survival together with other programs, and needs to find a way to defeat the MCP and escape his virtual prison.

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Greetings, Programs!

Tron accompanied the rise of home computers, and maybe it even had a part in popularizing computer technology with a larger part of the population. It also was one of the first visualizations of a cyberspace world on the movie screen. The film takes the interesting route to cast programs and other computer functions into human-like characters. It doesn’t really bring the audience closer to understand how a computer works, but creates a fascinating sense of immersion.

And while it’s not a philosophical treatise, the film inserts many thoughts about topics such as  malevolent AI, uncritical acceptance of computers’ decisions, and foreboding statements of our current digital generation (“Computers and programs will start thinking and the people will stop”). But there’s no excessive moralizing or complex discourse, the film always remains light-hearted and fully focused on visual excitement and action.

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Visionary Digital Effects Meet Family Entertainment

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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock (1651290a)
Tron, Jeff Bridges
Film and Television

The technical and artistic genius of the minds behind the special effects and production design have been highly praised, and described in much detail (for instance here). The end result of this gigantic effort was a world never seen before, playfully built from pixels and polygons. To be fair, the majority of frames in the film do not feature digital effects, but the part of the setting that is built using 3D computer graphics will stick with you the most.

In video games and movies of the time, 3D animation was limited to wire frames, but Tron featured full-screen computer-generated images with rendered 3D objects. Thanks to their sharp resolution these sequences retain a minimalist elegance to this day. And the suits of the anthropomorphic computer programs and functions – while created by analogue means – look just as awesome with their intricate patterns of illuminated neon lines.

For all its groundbreaking special effects, let’s not forget Tron is also an action film! Flynn embarks on an odyssey through the digital city and wilderness. The action  – arena fights and relentless chases with his weaponized adversaries – is very different from your typical 1980s action movie. With Tron, a new kind of action sequence was created: the fully computer-animated kind.

Many of the sequences look like 3D versions of the flat and pixelated 2D arcade games of the time: disc duels inspired by Pong, light bike chases that share some similarity with the Snake games, and tank battles in a labyrinth (like the Tank game). On top of the cool looks, these scenes are shot extremely well, and will have you at the edge of your seat all the time.

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Video Warriors, Look at the I/O Towers

There are also some actual humans in the film. Jeff Bridges as Flynn brings a youthful lightness and charisma to his role. Flynn and his friends need to face both chief adversary ENCOM vice-president Dillinger and his avatar Sark inside the mainframe, both terrifically portrayed by the late David Warner. His character is slightly more nuanced than your generic evil movie CEO, as behind his wannabe Machiavellism lurks the MCP who uses Dillinger as its human puppet.

Visionary digital effects meet family entertainment in Tron, one of the big 1980s Sci-Fi classics, and the best live-action movie ever released under the Disney banner. The film creates a mesmerizing world I would have wanted to delve into in the 1980s, but ironically these days it’s all too easy to get lost in cyberspace without even really wanting to. Tron is a unique and totally awesome entry to the Sci-Fi action genre, and its 2010 sequel Tron: Legacy didn’t even come close, but at least it succeeded in re-creating the look of the original for the next generation. End of line.

The Top 15 Action Movie Bar Fights of All Time

From Road House to Avengement, we rank the best bar fight scenes in action movie history.

Bars and nightclubs are familiar places to all of us. Maybe for that reason bar fights in action films resonate especially strong, and you may have even been caught in one! Aggression can multiply after a few beers, and the confined setting provides many opportunities for smashing people into furniture and through windows.  In this list we’ve compiled the 15 most awesome fights and shootouts in bars and related locations, so grab a drink and enjoy!

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15) Convoy (1978)

Peckinpah’s most upbeat film is a terrific homage to truckers, and this adventurous road trip features a chaotic brawl in a freeway diner. Trucker Rubber Duck (Kris Kristofferson) gets into one of many quarrels with crooked sheriff Lyle and his deputies, and a round of name-calling escalates into a more physical confrontation. People are shoved over the bar counter and smashed onto tables, all filmed in Peckinpah’s trademark slow-motion style.

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14) Riot (1996)

Riot is a DTV action classic from the masters of cost-efficient carnage PM Entertainment, with Gary Daniels at his physical peak. A city-wide riot has broken out, but ex-SAS operative Shane just wants to enjoy a pint. His buddy Williams is jostled by a by softball player, who is drowning his frustration that their match got canceled. The whole sports team thinks they can take their anger out on Shane and Williams, but get a lesson in roundhousing instead.

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13) The Killer (1989)

The Killer is the ultimate romantic action film, a poem written in blood. Contract killer Jeffrey’s next job is to take out some gangsters in a nightclub. Singer Li gets caught in the crossfire, and loses her eyesight from a misfired bullet. The overture to Woo’s opus magnum – albeit a comparatively brief sequence for his standards – sets the stage for the whole film with its dreamy imagery, tragedy and half a dozen people turned into Swiss cheese. 

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12) The Last Dragon (1985)

This Motown cult flick has it all, fantastic music, sexy people, and cheerful action! In this urban fairy tale, we follow the adventures of martial arts prodigy Leroy to attain the magical “Glow”, an aura that surrounds the best fighter in the world. His quest is hampered (amongst others) by loopy music producer Eddie Arkadian who has taken Leroy’s love interest and nightclub owner Angela hostage. When Leroy comes to the rescue the stage turns into a martial arts dance battle, but even the nastiest brutes in town are no match for him and his friends.

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11) Road House (1989)

In the penultimate 1980s macho action classic, traveling philosopher Dalton finds his calling as master bouncer to straighten out the patrons of a run-down bar in Missouri. Crime lord Wesley doesn’t like this and when he waltzes into the bar one day, his master henchman Jimmy takes out the whole bouncer crew until Dalton intervenes. 

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10) Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)

The T-1000 makes an iconic entrance, arriving naked in his time capsule. He walks into a biker bar and requests one of the patrons to hand over his “clothes, boots, and motorcycle”. Everyone jumps at the cyborg, but it’s hardly a fair fight, and surprisingly he leaves everyone crippled but alive.

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9) Dobermann (1997)

Dobermann is an ultimate classic of European action cinema, an all-out assault on viewers senses. 

The finale of the film is a delirious, stroboscopic bloodbath that starts off with a police raid on the nightclub where the Dobermann gang celebrate their latest coup. With both sides armed to the teeth, the venue becomes the stage of a massacre, but the DJ keeps playing until the bitter end.

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8) Debt Collectors (2020)

Bar fights have become a minor tradition in films of modern action maestro Jesse V. Johnson, and Debt Collectors has one of the best. When reprimanding a couple of drunks, Bouncer French needs to endure a tirade of offenses about his English heritage before he beats the daylights out of the “geriatric yank fucks”.  It’s a short and sweet fight, with Adkins demonstrating once again why he is one of the greatest action stars of our time.

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7) Desperado (1995)

Robert Rodriguez’ first masterpiece is high-octane cinema of the strongest caliber. El Marichi seeks to kill villain Bucho, who murdered the love of his life. He walks into a bar filled with Bucho’s henchmen, who have the habit of stowing a pile of weapons under their tables. Fortunately, El Mariachi brought a guitar case full of guns himself, and a vicious saloon shootout Gun Fu style begins.

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6) VFW (2019)

VFW aka Bar Massacre: The Film, delivers a fantastic re-imaging of grindhouse classics with an Assault of Precinct 13 type of premise. A group of war veterans is besieged in the bar of the local VFW by a gang of drug addicts. The gang manages to break through the door, and the barroom becomes the stage of an insane bloodbath.

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5) Showdown in Little Tokyo (1991)

Two wise-ass cops go after a Yakuza gang in this old-school masterpiece. LA cop Kenner (Dolph Lundgren) eats in his favorite Japanese restaurant when the Yakuza pay a visit to extort protection money. He easily disposes of them, but when his new partner Murata shows up afterwards, they run into a slight misunderstanding.  The sequence checks all the boxes for an awesome bar fight with people thrown over the counter, out of the window, and the whole place being shot to pieces.

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4) On Deadly Ground (1994)

“What does it take to change the essence of a man?” The answer: Two kicks to the balls and a broken nose. In On Deadly Ground Forrest Taft (Steven Seagal) takes it up for the environment and Native Americans. In the local bar, Taft protects a patron from some bullies. His intervention turns into a classic bar fight, and the barkeepers call “Don’t break anything!” goes unheard.

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3) From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)

This cult flick from Robert Rodriguez gave us a unique blend of a crime thriller a la Natural Born Killers and a splatter horror comedy. The criminal Gecko brothers celebrate their escape to Mexico in the Titty Twister bar. A dispute with the doorman is the smallest of their problems, when the bar crew shows its real face and turns into a horde of disfigured vampires. Shotguns and stakes become the weapons of choice, and the ragtag group of humans gets showered in ooze and blood.

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2) Avengement (2019)

Avengement is another masterpiece from Jesse V. Johnson and Scott Adkins. The tragicomic story of Cain’s failed stint in the criminal circuit, followed by several years in prison, culminates in a final standoff against the gang of his crooked brother. This sequence will give you a concussion and nosebleed from just watching it. It’s street violence to the extreme with metal bars and bottles becoming lethal weapons. All the rage that built up in Cain over the years is released in these few minutes, and gives us one of the best fights ever put on screen.

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1) Out for Justice (1991)

The title for best bar fight in action movie history goes to Brooklyn cop Gino Felino (Steven Seagal), who sets out to a neighborhood hunt for psychopathic criminal Richie. During his search, he stops by the bar where Richie’s brother hangs out. Gino strolls almost casually through the venue with his ego in total overdrive mode, and invites the crowd to take a punch at him. In return, he aikidos everyone into the ground, dealing out plenty of broken noses and shattered bones.

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