The French Connection: The Original Ultimate Action Movie Prototype

Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider set the tone for the prototypical ultimate actioner with The French Connection (1971).

The other week, I referred to Bullitt as among the first steps of modern action cinema and a proto-ultimate action movie masterwork (read that full article here). The French Connection is the next step in the evolution of the action film, grittier and more violent than its predecessors.

Controversial in 1971, a year dominated by controversial, violent films (think A Clockwork Orange, Straw Dogs, and especially fellow cop action hit Dirty Harry and be sure to read our ultimate rankings here), William Friedkin’s award-winner is the granddaddy of darker 1980s actioners like Escape from New York or even the satirical Robocop (read our rankings of all the Robocop films here!), films that make city life look like hell and violent crime a national epidemic.

The Gritty Real Story of The French Connection

Based on a real narcotics case in the early 1960s, the film follows cops “Popeye” Doyle (Gene Hackman) and Buddy Russo (Roy Scheider) as they chase down French criminals and a giant shipment of heroin. Their superiors have little faith in the enterprise, mainly because Popeye is a loose cannon whose behavior got a cop killed on a previous job.

Their prime adversary is the suave Alain Charnier (Fernando Rey), a drug king with all the manners of a gentleman. He’s using a TV star’s car to smuggle the drugs in plain sight, but will Popeye be able to sniff him out? And how many innocent casualties might ensue from Popeye’s Ahab-like obsession?

Popeye Doyle: the Quintessential Anti-Hero

Popeye Doyle is one of the quintessential violent anti-heroes that were all the rage in 1970s Hollywood cinema, a definite shift from the more likable 1960s anti-heroes, who despite their rule-breaking were generally people you might not mind hanging out with. He’s a closer relation to Harry Callahan than Frank Bullitt, that’s for sure!

Popeye is a violent, sleazy guy who wakes up wasted in bars and picks up random women off the street. He doesn’t appear to have anything resembling a life outside of his work, so that’s where all his energy goes. Buddy is about the closest thing he has to family, and even that relationship isn’t warm and fuzzy.

Popeye appears to take pleasure in the brutality he inflicts on thugs, viewing his pursuit of criminals as more of a personal vendetta than merely a means of getting a paycheck. Anytime Popeye is chasing a criminal, anyone who gets in the way better watch out too.

You can see why his superiors would have reservations about him, as he is often as ruthless as the bad guys he’s pursuing. His eccentricity makes him somewhat appealing (we first see him undercover as a rather un-cuddly street Santa Claus), but the audience is kept at a distance by his thuggish behavior.

A Classic Action Cinema Pace

Much of the action is built up to slowly. We get a lot of the humdrum details of cop life, with Popeye shadowing his prey in the streets. The job is shown to be thankless and tedious, making one almost understand why Popeye goes nuts when action is finally called for. His life is contrasted with the privileged existence of Charnier and his criminal ilk, who dine in expensive restaurants and drive fancy cars. This is a world where crime does pay and there’s not much the frustrated protagonist can do about that.

The highlight is Popeye chasing down a shooter assigned to take him out at his crummy apartment. Evading the shots, he chases the man through the NYC streets. When he gets a civilian car to chase the killer (who snuck onto a subway before Popeye could get onboard), it almost comes off like a carjacking. As director William Friedkin once said in an interview, Popeye blurs the line between cop and criminal in his use of violence to do his job.

The French Connection Car Chase

In some quarters what I’m about to say might be seen as heresy, but I actually prefer this chase to the one in Bullitt. Those low-angle POV shots racing through the busy NYC traffic are deliriously thrilling. What makes it so tense is also how utterly insane Popeye is with his total disregard for human life.

In the Bullitt chase (which you can watch here), McQueen was on a mostly empty street, endangering other cars more than innocent bystanders. But here, Popeye drives on the wrong side of the road several times, famously almost hitting a mother and her child. He causes car crashes (one of which was actually a real, unplanned accident preserved for realism’s sake!). And all without giving much of a damn!

How Does the Action Hold Up to Modern Standards?

The use of real locations, natural lighting, and some mild shaky cam make The French Connection feel like a documentary. This realism makes the violence pretty uncomfortable at times, though there’s nothing here that would necessarily shock a post-Tarantino moviegoer. Any shock you feel comes from how blunt the violence is, not how much blood or guts are on display.

The Don Ellis soundtrack complements this tone, far more interested in unsettling the viewer than getting them pumped. That opening music is an audial punch in the face with its pounding underscore and wailing horns, like you’ve been caught in the middle of pressing, dangerous traffic. The ending scene’s theme in particular gives me chills every time, a sour feeling in the stomach. And I mean that all in the best possible way.

The French Connection Action Connections

The French Connection’s influence is long-reaching. Pretty much every cop show or movie made after 1971 bears its mark, not to mention any movie with a big car chase or chases, like The Road Warrior or even something wacky like The Blues Brothers. Bourne director Paul Greengrass once claimed The French Connection might be the greatest action film of all time, as well as a big influence on the Bourne series itself.

Greatest or no, I’ll leave you ultimate action fans to decide, but there is no doubt that The French Connection remains a tense, visceral ride, without which many of our favorite 80s/90s action classics would not have been possible.


What are your favorite scenes or memories from The French Connection? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Chuck Norris Hosts 5K Where Everyone Dresses Up As Chuck Norris

Celebrity announcer Chuck Norris leaves the stage during driver introductions at the AAA Texas 500 on Sunday, Nov. 6, 2016 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by David Kent/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/TNS) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***

It’s been called the ‘Chuck Norris’ of Chuck Norris 5K’s Hosted by Chuck Norris.

Chuck Norris is so fast he won the Daytona 500, and watched 499 laps from the stands.

Chuck Norris is so fast that when he runs, he can see his back.

Chuck Norris is so fast, his roundhouse kicks are faster than the speed of light.

Maybe that’s why Chuck Norris has decided to organize his very own Chuck Norris-themed 5k run – because if Chuck Norris took part, none of would stand a chance.

READ MORE: A CHUCK NORRIS LOOKALIKE IS RUNNING FOR POLITICAL OFFICE IN POLAND.

The C-Force Chuck Norris 5K

The inaugural C-Force Chuck Norris 5K is taking place this May 4th, 2019 and it’s offering fans a truly once-in-a-lifetime experience.

Complete the run dressed as Chuck Norris and you’ll not only get a high five from the man himself on the finish line, but you’ll also be part of a pretty unique world record attempt.

Norris and the race’s organizers are aiming to set a new world record at the event for the most people dressed as Chuck Norris at any one time.

Taking place at College Station in Texas, the race will begin with an introduction from the ultimate action movie legend, who will deliver a few words of encouragement before the main event.

READ MORE: THE HISTORY OF CONAN’S ‘WALKER, TEXAS RANGER LEVER’

A Chuck Norris Approved Event

Prizes will also be handed out to the best Chuck Norris costumes, with prizes for best male, best female and best child. Those unwilling to dress as Norris need not fear either – they won’t be on the receiving end of a roundhouse kick for their lack of efforts. Instead, anyone registering for the event will receive a Chuck Norris t-shirt, fake beard and distinctive Walker, Texas Ranger style belt buckle.

READ MORE: THE TOP 10 CHUCK NORRIS MOVIES OF ALL TIME.

Chuck Norris’ Mercy Project

Fans can register to take part now with prices starting at $30 for adults and $25 for kids.

There’s even a VIP package offering runners the chance to enjoy a pre-race breakfast with Norris.

The event is racing money for a good cause too with all proceeds going to Kickstart Kids, an organization funded by Norris to help young kids build character through the strength and discipline of martial arts.

Funds will also go to the non-profit organization Mercy Project, which has been set up to end child slavery in Ghana.


Who do you think would win in a race between Chuck Norris a thousand Chuck Norris lookalikes? Let us know your thoughts in the comments or on our Facebook page!

The 5 Best Fight Scenes from The Original Matrix (1999)

Some of the most ultimate moments from the sci-fi martial arts action classic The Matrix!

If you’re going to have a website dedicated to the most Ultimate Action Movies ever made, it would be a cardinal sin to not include anything on 1999’s iconic classic, The Matrix. 

This movie bleeds ULTIMATE action – it is the epitome of what every great action movie longs to be, and then some! Sure, the flick has an all-star cast led by Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, and Laurence Fishburne (and who could forget Hugo Weaving’s nefarious villain, Agent Smith), as well as an intoxicatingly thought-provoking moral focused on the limits of reality and self-belief, but let’s be honest – you watch The Matrix for the revolutionary fight scenes! 

Blending breath-taking hand-to-hand combat with heart-pounding shootouts, the action sequences in this movie were so far ahead of their time that most of them still hold up today, some 20 years later! 

Get out your trench coat and turn up the dubstep music as we rank the top 5 fight scenes from The Matrix:

5) “No Lieutenant, your men are already dead.” 

The film’s opening scene is an adrenaline shot to the head. The perpetually leather-donned Trinity finds herself pinned down by police in a dusty, old, deserted building. As the Agents arrive to the scene, they inform the leading officer that there’s a reason his men were told not to engage, leading us into the first fight sequence in the film. 

Trinity showcases her combat prowess, easily disposing of the cops, and then has to make a daring escape. This sequence also gives the audience our first taste of the groundbreaking 360-degree slow-motion effect that The Matrix has come to be most remembered for, as Trinity gives an absolutely devastating jump-kick to an opponent’s chest (a move later copied by Princess Fiona in Shrek). What a way to start a movie!

4) “Dodge this.” 

As Neo and Trinity risk it all to save their fearless leader, Morpheus, they find themselves on the roof of a high-rise building. There is a brief moment where we see them effortlessly kicking the asses of the private security dispatched to stop them, but the scales are drastically tilted as a helicopter pilot is transformed into an Agent. 

Neo unloads his clips at him, but the Agent dodges every bullet. As the Agent fires back at Neo, we get the truly iconic slow-motion scene in which Neo defies gravity with a body-bending limbo, dodging (or at least, almost dodging) all of the shots. 

The Agent slowly approaches to finish off his target, but before he can pull the trigger, Trinity puts a gun to his temple from point-blank range and blows him away. 

This sequence has played a role in inspiring countless special effects scenes since then, but it’s hard to top the innovation of the original.

3) “He’s beginning to believe.” 

In the final showdown, Agent Smith faces off with Neo in a deserted Subway.  The sequence is dripping with Western motifs, as a piece of trash takes the place of a tumbleweed and billows between them. 

They begin with an intense shootout, both men diving towards each other as the slow-motion camera yet again swirls around them, displaying all of the flying bullets. Both men empty their clips, and the real fun begins, as the audience is treated to some of the most high-quality hand-to-hand choreography in cinematic history. 

The scene has a real against-all-odds feel to it, and Neo is only able to defeat Smith by accepting his true identity: “My name…is Neo!

2.) “Stop trying to hit me and hit me!” 

After Neo has “downloaded” hours of martial arts knowledge, Morpheus takes him to an interactive training dojo for a little master vs. student sparring. This is arguably the most beautiful sequence of the entire film, a brilliantly composed fight showcasing an assortment of various martial arts techniques. 

Fans of classic karate flicks will be drunk with joy as Morpheus tries to get Neo to realize that his true power can be as great as his mind allows it to be, all the while throwing a myriad of punches and kicks.

1) “Backup…send backup!” 

It simply doesn’t get much more ULTIMATE than The Matrix’s penultimate fight sequence. As Agent Smith torturously interrogates Morpheus, Neo and Trinity enter the lobby of the building and immediately start putting holes in people. 

I’m trying to think of a shootout from another film to compare this to, but honestly, none come to mind – this scene is truly one-of-a-kind movie magic! 

The slow motion is again utilized effectively, as the badass duo cartwheel and wall-run their way through a slew of enemies. This is undoubtedly the best fight scene in the movie, and it’s arguably one of the best in history.


Although he wasn’t born until 1991, don’t assume this feisty millennial can’t tell Tom Selleck from Tom Cruise. Nick Hemming has long been an action movie aficionado, comic book enthusiast (ONLY Marvel; DC sucks!), and all-around wunderkind. When he isn’t watching movies, he is probably writing about them.

What’s your favorite scene from the original Matrix? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Steven Seagal and Michael Caine Share Contrasting Memories of ‘On Deadly Ground’

Michael Caine and Steven Seagal seem to have different accounts of On Deadly Ground (1994).

Michael Caine has opened up about his experience of On Deadly Ground, labelling it one of his biggest regrets – but it would appear the ultimate action movie legend has a very different recollection of events.

Caine delivered his Steven Seagal body-slam during an interview with Rolling Stone where he was initially asked to reveal a role he regretted turning down.

“I never made that kind of mistake. I only made the ones in the opposite direction — what I didn’t say no to.”

Asked to give a specific example, the interview mentioned On Deadly Ground, the film that sees Seagal’s mystical martial artist and environmental agent going head-to-head with Caine, who plays the head of a ruthless oil corporation.

Seagal’s On Deadly Ground Flop

Poorly reviewed upon initial release, On Deadly Ground was also a box office bomb, earning $38.6 million off a reported $50 million budget.

Directed by Seagal, the film marked a damaging chapter in the martial arts master’s rise to stardom and, apparently, it’s not too fondly remembered by Caine.

“It wasn’t one of my dream experiences, to put it nicely,” he told Rolling Stone.

“We were in Alaska. He was quite pleasant, but I never saw much of him; he never came out of his motorhome very much. He was one of the top whatever it is — jiu-jitsu, whatever it is they do. I’d never argue with him. I didn’t want him to throw me over.”

Michael Caine v. Steven Seagal

Despite Caine’s negative assessment of the production, Seagal has a distinctly different memory of events on that particular production.

Recently asked by the Newcastle Herald to name his favourite co-star, Seagal offered the following:

“They’re all fantastic. Michael Caine is a legend and that’s why I cast him in On Deadly Ground. He was fantastic and it’s one of my favourite movies, with a message I care about and, of course, I directed it.

“I’ve been lucky enough to play some amazing characters and write and direct stories I care about – such as political corruption in Above the Law, big-business corruption and the environment in Fire Down Below and On Deadly Ground.”


What are your thoughts on Seagal’s personal project On Deadly Ground? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

The Rocketeer: The Fun Love Letter to Pulp Action That Failed

But we still ultimately love The Rocketeer (1991) and you should too!

Though The Rocketeer is considered a cult classic these days, it was a major disappointment for the Disney company when first released. Intended to jumpstart an action-packed franchise, it barely recouped its budget and failed to find an audience until home video. In this way, the film resembles the 1990 Dick Tracy, another pulp homage which bombed upon initial release. (Read more: here’s our UAMC review on Warren Beatty’s colorfully overlooked comic noir actioner Dick Tracy here!)

But while I can see why the relatively arty Dick Tracy didn’t immediately take with a general audience, I have a harder time understanding why The Rocketeer failed. In short, The Rocketeer is a fun love letter to pulp action. Not perfect, sure, but quite enjoyable and full of heart.

UAMC Remembers The Rocketeer

Depression-era pilot Cliff Secord (Bill Campbell) craves something more than the air circuses he and his mechanic pal Peevy (Alan Arkin) participate in for a living. His aspiring Hollywood actress girlfriend Jenny (Jennifer Connelly) doesn’t understand his ambitions—though to be fair, he doesn’t understand hers either.

Things change when Cliff and Peevy stumble upon a mysterious jet pack left in their plane. Curious, the two try it out and soon, Cliff takes to using the jetpack for heroic rescues, first when a show on the airfield goes wrong. However, the jet-pack is the property of Howard Hughes (Terry O’Quinn) and ended up in Cliff’s plane only because it was stolen from Hughes by gangsters who hid the invention in the plane during an escape from a car full of G-men.

Cliff’s heroics as the mysterious Rocketeer garner the notice of the FBI and Hughes, as well as the gangsters and their associate Neville Sinclair (Timothy Dalton), an Errol Flynn style matinee idol with Nazi connections and a putty-faced henchman (“Tiny Ron” Taylor) on his payroll. Things get even more complicated when Jenny’s connection to Cliff puts a target on her back, forcing her into the clutches of Sinclair and a much bigger plot that endangers the United States.

Pulp Action Adventure at its Finest

Ultimate action movie fans might see some similarities between this movie and the Indiana Jones films. Moviegoers more used to modern superhero fare might compare the movie to Iron Man since both those movies are about a smart-aleck “superhero” who uses advanced technology as his “power” (interestingly, director Joe Johnston’s work on this movie was what got him hired for Captain America: The First Avenger, another retro action film).

However, Raiders of the Lost Ark is the more obvious comparison (which IS ABSOLUTELY AN ULTIMATE ACTION MOVIE itself), as it was a direct influence. Both are set in the 1930s and have Nazis as the primary villains. Both have dashing, cocksure heroes and gorgeous damsels in white. Both update their action for the blockbuster-crazy, action movie-mad audiences of the 80s and 90s.

Action and adventure are The Rocketeer’s bread and butter. From the opening scene, we’ve got plane stunts and a car chase. While never as violent as Indy’s outings, the scenes are choreographed well. The finale on a Nazi dirigible is certainly the best, most exciting scene, worth its weight in popcorn, and as memorable as any of the grand climaxes in any Indy picture.

The late Roger Ebert was correct to note that the prime difference between The Rocketeer and Raiders of the Lost Ark is that while the later homages and gently kids 1930s serials, the former embraces them wholeheartedly, evoking that same “golly gee” optimism and wide-eyed sense of adventure. One could easily mock the film for being “corny,” but that would be missing the point. This film is self-aware of its corniness while at the same time playing everything straight.

So What Kept it From Being a Success?

If the film has a prime flaw, it’s the pacing, which at intervals is too slow. A more deliberate pace is fine when you have richer characters or a more dramatic, twisty plot, but neither of these describes The Rocketeer. A pulpy, two-punch story like this demands a breathless pace.

The casting is just perfect across the board. Bill Campbell is all good intentions and courageousness as Cliff. I can’t imagine any bigger name actor playing the role as effectively, since Campbell just disappears into the part. Never more beautiful, Jennifer Connelly is allowed some spunk and smarts even when she’s playing the damsel-in-distress. The always-fun Alan Arkin is amusingly eccentric and gruff as Cliff’s mechanic father figure, enlivening what could have been a colorless role.

However, the best performance has to be Timothy Dalton as the Nazi villain. He oozes narcissistic charm. Neville seems to absolutely believe he is the swashbuckling rogue he plays in the movies. When he thinks he’s won the day, he giggles like a little kid on Christmas morning at the carnage. I cannot imagine a more perfect nemesis to Cliff’s straightforward, unpretentious goodness.

A Surprise “Ultimate” Action Movie

The special effects were headed by George Lucas’s Industrial Light and Magic team. They are old-school effects which sometimes strike the modern eye as uneven, with thick matte lines here and there. However, as other reviewers have mentioned, this only adds to the film’s nostalgic appeal. Considering the intentional corniness (“Go get ‘em kid!” says a gangster with a heart of gold as Cliff flies off before a giant American flag.), the occasionally cheesy effects fit all too well.

This isn’t a movie for the cynical moviegoer. Indeed, most of the fans I’ve come across are people who fondly remember this film from their childhood, who watch it because it takes them back to a happier, simpler time and place, much like the innocent setting the film evokes.

I would say The Rocketeer also works for those who were not introduced to it as children, so long as you approach it with the right frame of mind. It has all the action and one-liners you could ever want from an ultimate action film, but it also has the power to reactivate that childhood sense of wonder modern action fare rarely, if ever, cares to dabble in anymore.


Do you fondly remember The Rocketeer? Let us know your favorite scenes or memories in the comments below!

We Die Young: Jean-Claude Van Damme Debuts Trailer for Gang Thriller

This first trailer for JCVD’s ‘We Die Young’ looks pretty darned ultimate!

The first trailer for Jean-Claude Van Damme’s gritty new crime thriller We Die Young has landed and it finds the Belgian back on familiar territory. Van Damme is Daniel, a war veteran who strikes up a friendship with a young teen named Lucas (Elijah Rodriguez) who has been embroiled in the violent LA gang scene. (Here’s our original write-up about Van Damme’s involvement with We Die Young.)

However, when the gang attempts to recruit Lucas’s younger brother into a life of crime, he decides enough is enough and recruits Daniel to help them escape. What follows is a brutal and thrilling chase across the city with the gang in hot pursuit and only Van Damme standing between them and a swift demise.

Also starring Joana Metrass, Jacob Scipio, Uriel Emil, Nicholas Sean Johnny and Joseph Long, We Die Young sees the Belgian continuing his current run of gritty thrillers.

The Muscles from Brussels most recently starred in The Bouncer (which dropped a new trailer of its own, which you can view here!), a decidedly more European affair which sees the high-kicking hero going undercover in a brutal crime organisation based in France.

READ MORE: THE 10 BEST JEAN-CLAUDE VAN DAMME ACTION MOVIES OF ALL TIME!

Van Damme’s ‘We Die Young’

We Die Young is a very different kettle of fish though as the official synopsis explains:

“Jean-Claude Van Damme shines in this gritty action thriller set in a crime-ridden barrio of Washington, D.C. When ruthless drug lord Rincon and his MS-13 gang recruit 10-year-old Miguel to work as a runner, big brother Lucas is desperate to keep Miguel safe.”

“Fleeing for their lives, the boys are rescued by a veteran with PTSD named Daniel (Van Damme), who helps them find their revenge.”

Fans can expect to see some hard-hitting action alongside the familiar array of high kicks.

We Die Young is released on March 1st.


Let us know your thoughts about this first look JCVD trailer in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Jean-Claude Van Damme’s Favorite One-Liners According to His Fans

FILMBILD / T: Harte Ziele / Hard Target D: Jean Claude Van Damme R: John Woo P: USA J: 1993 DA: Originaldateiname: 16458.JPG Filmstill // HANDOUT / EDITORIAL USE ONLY! / Please note: Fees charged by the agency are for the agency?s services only, and do not, nor are they intended to, convey to the user any ownership of Copyright or License in the material. The agency does not claim any ownership including but not limited to Copyright or License in the attached material. By publishing this material you expressly agree to indemnify and to hold the agency and its directors, shareholders and employees harmless from any loss, claims, damages, demands, expenses (including legal fees), or any causes of action or allegation against the agency arising out of or connected in any way with publication of the material.

Van Damme asked his fans for their favourite JCVD one-liners and the answers did not disappoint…

Jean-Claude Van Damme recently took to Twitter to poll his fans on their favourite one-liners from JCVD action movies gone by.

The Muscles from Brussels was evidently in the mood to reminisce, taking to social media to share an image from his 1993 classic Hard Target alongside the classic line : “Now take your big stick and your boyfriend and find a bus to catch!”

Keen to interact with his loyal ultimate action movie-loving followers, Van Damme posed the question: What’s your favorite one liner from any of my movies?

The answers did not disappoint.

A few fans came back with some classics from TimeCop:

Another Hard Target classic made the list:

Universal Soldier also got a mention:

Lionheart also made the cut:

https://twitter.com/KamenRiderWoz84/status/1085983830048235520

And Double Impact also got referenced on more than a few occasions:

https://twitter.com/TheMikeDamico/status/1085987776716308480

https://twitter.com/mseadog23/status/1086101660890320898

https://twitter.com/TheMikeDamico/status/1085987776716308480

Let’s not forget Nowhere To Run either:

And no JCVD quote-off would be complete with Bloodsport:

Or Kickboxer for that matter:

There were nods to lesser known Van Damme classics like No Retreat No Surrender:

And Street Fighter even got a mention:

More than a few times, in fact:

Plenty of established favourites were included too, like Maximum Risk:

While fans also remembered that old habits die hard with Van Damme:

And that, when it comes to JCVD, actions often spoke louder than words:

Much, much louder, in fact:

Especially when it came to THAT dance:

Back on the big screen with his gritty new effort The Bouncer (watch the trailer here), it’s fair to say Van Damme still has many admirers in the action movie community – us included!

Never change, JCVD, never change.


What is your favourite Jean-Claude Van Damme one-liner? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Sylvester Stallone Reveals his one Major Regret From Rocky IV

Mandatory Credit: Photo By SNAP / REX FEATURES FILM STILLS OF 'ROCKY IV' WITH 1985, DIRECTOR DIRECTS, SYLVESTER STALLONE IN 1985 VARIOUS NO MERCHANDISING 1985, DIRECTOR DIRECTS, SYLVESTER STALLONE

Here’s the one thing Stallone would have done differently in Rocky IV.

Sylvester Stallone has revealed his one major regret from making Rocky IV and it’s one that might leave co-star Carl Weathers feeling a little conflicted.

As any Rocky fan worth their salt knowns, Weathers’ character Apollo Creed bites the dust early on into proceedings after Dolph Lundgren’s Ivan Drago quite literally kills him in the ring. (Watch their famous fight here!)

In Rocky’s defence, he had been instructed by Apollo not to stop the fight “no matter what”.

However, it’s a decision that leaves Rocky full of regret and baying for revenge against DragoPaulie aside, Apollo was pretty much Balboa’s best buddy.

READ MORE: 10 REASONS WHY ‘ROCKY IV’ IS THE MOST UNDERRATED CHRISTMAS MOVIE OF ALL-TIME!

Stallone’s Greatest Rocky?

Yet without Creed’s death, Rocky IV would have lacked the necessary narrative spark that would later see the retired Rocky return to the ring to dish out one last ass-kicking.

That doesn’t mean Stallone doesn’t have some regrets about offing Weathers’ character though.

In fact, he recently put those feelings into words as part of an Instagram post posted on Weathers’ birthday.

VIDEO: HOW SYLVESTER STALLONE AND CARL WEATHERS CHOREOGRAPHED THAT EPIC ROCKY FIGHT!

RIP Apollo Creed

https://www.instagram.com/p/BspCQ23BmH5/

Alongside all the usual pleasantries, Sly wrote:

“HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Carl Weathers! Your performances were amazing!… Besides being a great actor he is the BEST cinema boxer of ALL TIME ! Truly amazing , GRACE , POWER , and UNBELIEVABLY FAST!!!!! Never ever to be duplicated! Thank you my friend, never could have done it without you!!! ….. I have to admit I regret having Apollo passing away so soon. He was Irreplaceable…”

Rocky IV’s Ultimate Legacy

Gushing over his athleticism and general ability as a movie boxer, it seems like if Stallone could go back he would do things differently.

However, without Creed’s death there would be no Creed or Creed 2. There might not have even been a Rocky V. Mind you, maybe that’s not a bad thing.


What are your thoughts on Rocky IV and Stallone’s news? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

The Critically Acclaimed ‘Nightshooters’ Starring Jean-Paul Ly is Coming

Here’s everything you need to know about Jean-Paul Ly in ‘Nightshooters’ (2019)!

Starring rising martial arts star Jean-Paul Ly is coming back with a bang thanks to Nightshooters, a movie already being hailed as one of the most original and exciting action films of the year so far.

Nightshooters centres on a group of filmmakers who find themselves on the run from a violent horde of criminals after witnessing a brutal gangland execution.

Unable to flee the building they have been shooting in, the hapless film crew use their technical skill and knowledge to survive as the gangsters move in to eliminate witnesses.

With the stunt man being a martial arts master, the special effects guru ditching safety to set lethal traps, and the sound department placing radio mics to track their attackers, it becomes a strategic game of survival against all odds.

Blow Up Meets Blow Out!

Helmed by award-winning writer/director Marc Price (Colin, Magpie) and boasting a great ensemble cast, Nightshooters fuses elements of The Raid, Blow-Up and Blow Out with quick-fire gags, gangsters and hard-hitting action. Ly doesn’t disappoint either, building on the success he enjoyed on the underrated Jailbreak and in his breakout effort Doctor Strange.

Nightshooters is available on Blu-ray, DVD & digital download from 28th January.


Are you excited for this new actioner? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Why John Woo’s ‘Hard Boiled’ is Pure Modern Action Perfection

UAMC honors legendary action director John Woo and his 1992 classic ‘Hard Boiled’

n his AV/Film review of John Woo’s Hard Boiled, Tom Breihan claimed, “Taste is subjective and all, but if you have a top-five action-movies list and Hard Boiled isn’t on it, your top five ain’t shit.” I don’t usually care for statements like that, but I will concur that it’s hard to imagine any action movie buff who wouldn’t get a big kick out of Woo’s overwrought bullet ballet, his last Hong Kong production before he emigrated to the States.

Jazz-loving, toothpick-chomping Officer “Tequila” (Chow Yun-Fat) loses his long-time partner in a teahouse shootout with a pack of gun-smugglers. Intent on justice and/or revenge, he pursues the criminals, leading him to contact with Alan (Tony Leung), an undercover cop spying on the triads and posing as a hired killer.

Their partnership is uneasy, since Alan is slowly crumbling under the stress from the endless violence, but the two must set aside these doubts when the criminals take an entire hospital hostage, culminating in one of the most outrageous and wonderful thriller climaxes of all time.

The Understated Legacy of John Woo’s The Killer (1989)

Ultimate Style Over Ultimate Substance

The most common complaint about Hard Boiled is that it’s a classic example of “style over substance,” and I’m not going to debate that. While the film does touch on questions of honor in a violent world, it never goes into great detail about it.

When I think of Hard Boiled, I think of a series of impressive action set-pieces rather than a compelling story, true. The teahouse shootout with Tequila keeping a toothpick poised between his lips as he evades close-range gunfire, and the climactic showdown in the hospital where Tequila must rescue an entire maternity ward of crying infants from certain death, are the things which leave their mark in Hard Boiled, and not so much the complexity of the characters. However, Hard Boiled is impressively staged and so much fun. Considering how that’s all it appears to aspire to be, I’m not going to go crazy criticizing the narrative.

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John Woo’s Action Mastery

While Woo is more interested in adrenaline and kinetic filmmaking in this movie, don’t assume this is Michael Bay levels of mindlessness—the film keeps itself in check with its wry, even dark sense of humor. (See the scene where a baby peeing on itself saves Tequila from burning to death. No, I’m not joking, that is a scene.)

Before viewing, it must be made clear that Hard Boiled runs on what TV Tropes calls the Rule of Cool, the idea that the audience can swallow something implausible or downright ridiculous as long as it is packaged in overwhelming awesomeness. If you demand hardcore realism in your action movies, then of course you’ll balk at 95% of what happens in Hard Boiled (or for that matter, most 80s/90s action movies!). But did we come here expecting realism? Nope!

Hard Boiled features some of the most breathtaking action scenes ever to grace the silver screen. Motorcycles exploding in mid-jump? Check! Windows breaking from the forcing of dramatically falling bodies? Check! Seemingly endless hordes of gun-toting henchmen? Check! Elaborate tracking shots crammed with gunplay and suspense? Check! (No shaky cam to obscure the choreography, either!)

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The Coolness of Chow Yun-Fat

The other prime attraction is Chow Yun-Fat, as charismatic as ever. The man is unspeakably cool, casually throwing off one-liners and walking into battle with a baby cradled in his arm with the utmost confidence. He makes you believe in every outrageous moment because you just buy that this man could walk into a den of vicious underworld thugs and walk out alive.

Unlike The Killer, here he plays a man on the right side of the law, though no less troubled.  His Tequila is brave, smart, and willing to risk his life to save innocents, but an undercurrent of aggression just barely put in check courses through him. Tequila is an angry man, angry at his superiors, angry at the criminals. One wonders if he will ever find any peace, even after the credits roll.

Tony Leung’s Alan is also troubled, disturbed by the violence in his line of work. Like Tequila, there is a hint of melancholy in the character which lends the movie what depth it has. Both actors have great chemistry that makes the action scenes even more fun to watch.

Hard Boiled is pure action. Some might even say it’s pure cinema with its intense focus on visuals and exciting motion more so than dialogue or much else. Whatever you call it, it’s a fun ride and not easily forgotten. If his previous work hadn’t proved it enough, Hard Boiled proclaims Woo undoubtedly a master of his craft and a modern action movie master.


What do you think about John Woo’s Hard Boiled? Let us know in the comments!