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Warlords 3000
(1992)
Director: Faruque Ahmed
Cast:
Jay Roberts, Denise Marie Duff, Steve Blanchard
Here is another case when I wish there there were truth in advertising laws
concerning video boxes. To begin with, the warrior pictured on the video box of
Warlords 3000 not only is brandishing weapons and wearing clothing
that the movie's main protagonist (or, for that matter, anyone else in the
movie) never has anywhere in the actual film, the warrior pictured is not even
the actor who actually appears in the movie. Well, this kind of visual deception
happens so much, that many of us (including myself), have become
kind of used to
it. I might have been able to accept this alone, but the video box goes further
in its deception. Not only does it deceive with a picture, but it deceives with
its title - there are not 3000 warlords in Warlords 3000! Instead
there's just one, maybe two if you stretch the criteria a little. Besides, in
the movie itself, the opening credits proclaim that what's about to play is called Warlord 3000
- no "s". Though even then, neither of the two warlords here
don't seem to be 3000th in a line of warlords. If the "3000" part
of the title is supposed to be the year of the events seen in this movie, it
seems kind of strange then that the amount of technology seen here seems to be
that of the late 20th century, even if the world seen here is that of a
post-environmental holocaust. Now I know that the above sounds like
real-nitpicking, and that you have to suspend
your disbelief to a degree when you are watching
most sci-fi/fantasy movies. But at the same
time, such movies have to do their part to
convince you that the worlds they are portraying
even have a foot in plausibility. When they
instead keep constantly slapping your face with
an attitude that suggests contempt for the
audience, how can you find in yourself the
courtesy to do any favors for them in return?
Doing something badly is bad enough, but doing
something bad with no sign that you are even
trying to do good is even worse. Warlords
3000 is so unimaginative, so badly done,
that it barely even qualifies as a movie. About
the only thing that qualifies it as a movie is
that it runs 92 minutes - 92 of the most
painful, endless, and torturous minutes you
can't possibly imagine. Both the movie's
awfulness and lack of originality become evident
even before the movie properly starts off. While
we see endless footage of red radioactive skies
(whoa, the colors), a senior-sounding narrator
sets up the situation for us. This is obviously
inspired by the opening of The Road
Warrior, even more so when you realize
that, just as it was in The Road Warrior,
this aged narrator is subsequently seen meeting
the Mad Max-like hero when he was a child. Oh,
and the child in this movie is also quiet most
of the time, as well as being unintelligible the few
times he uses his mouth (Even though the child
here is speaking English, he delivers his lines
so badly I couldn't understand what he said.)
The narrator tells us that some kind of
environmental holocaust happened, but he's
remarkably coy in telling us just what exactly
happened to screw up the world so badly.
Subsequently, he starts to describe what the
world is like now, comparing it to what the
movie's central protagonist (named Nova) told
him what the world was like (despite the fact
that from what we see, these two characters
spent virtually no time together.) The narrator
tells us that Nova told him the incredible fact
that the skies were once blue (despite the fact
that in several shots we see bluish skies), and
that you could once eat many kinds of plants
(despite the fact that we later see characters
with flour and French fries in their
possession.)
This and other instances of contradictory
narration is bad enough, but what is even
worse
is that this pompous, overly theatrical narrator
refuses to shut up. For the next few minutes he
keeps yak-yaking in his colorful tongue until
you want to strangle him so that he'll shut up.
Eventually, he does - but not for long. Every so
often, he returns to torture us with his
flowerly speech to explain to us what the
characters are feeling, important plot points
that we never got to see, and.... Yes, I agree
with you - the makers of this movie decided to
use excess narration because of excessive
laziness, or because there were a number of
problems during the shoot that resulted in an
inadequate amount of footage that would properly
explain every plot point. I'm not sure which
reason is more likely, because there's
additional evidence to suggest either
possibility. Sometimes the evidence suggests
both possibilities, such as the fact that the
movie shows off a lot of footage that was filmed
of dirt bikes and other off-road vehicles racing
along the dunes... that was apparently filmed at
a real desert race rally, segments of which are
edited in every few minutes with the explanation
that these racers are the movie's drug-crazed
bad guys, who spend much of their time aimlessly
racing along these dunes.
I guess before I get further into who is who and
who does what, I should first better explain the
setup for this movie's post-apocalypse setting.
But... I really can't. All the plot really
consists of is yet another tired retelling of
the old "revenge for a slaughtered family that
had been preparing for the hero's homecoming"
story, though it's never been so tediously told
before. There is no possible reason why it
should take the protagonist - who, naturally, is
a deadly fighter - so long in completing his
task. Except, of course, for the possibility
that the people who made this movie had no idea
how to properly stretch out the hero's quest for
revenge for a hour and a half. So after the
slaughter the rest of the first hour, apart from
the hero occasionally remembering he's got to
kill someone, consists mostly of three kinds of
scenes:
(1) The brooding hero doing nothing but hanging
around a bar, one that strangely has the
capacity to distribute printed matchbooks
advertising itself
(2) The villain screaming at his idiot henchmen
to do better, including one bizarre sequence
when he lectures his henchmen with the use of a
chalkboard as a
teaching device, writing the word RUTHLESS on it
("The word of the day!")
(3) Vignettes that have no influence on the plot
or characters. Not just with the use of the
desert rally footage, but scenes such as when
two goons play "keepaway" with a grown woman's
teddy bear, or when the hero cures someone
suffering from a seizure by repeatedly punching
the patient in the head
Some of this material, as you might have
guessed, does provide some unintended laughs, so
I guess there is something positive to say
about
it. Mostly, though, it's just tedious, and just
adds to the frustration generated by the
protagonist's inability to get on with it. Then
at the one hour mark, the screenplay takes an
even worse turn by introducing a new villain out
of the blue. Not that the idea of introducing
someone new so far into the movie could never
have any potential, but the fact that this
doesn't do anything out of the ordinary to
what's going on in the movie. Does the
introduction of this additional villain add an
extra dimension to the hero's quest for revenge,
further develop any of the supporting
characters, or simply add an interesting
subplot? Nope, none of those things and nothing
else, save, of course, just to further slow down
our protagonist's quest for revenge for several
more minutes. Well, maybe they were just trying
to make our protagonist look more "good" by
introducing more "evil", though it's too little,
too late. Besides, in the course of the movie he
doesn't always exactly do things that endear us
to him. In one scene, he plants a bomb on the
outer wall of a shack belonging to one of the bad
guys. You may be able to shrug off the
peculiarity of the subsequent explosion
originating in the interior of the house, but
probably not the fact that the bomb kills not
just the bad guy but his totally innocent abused
girlfriend. In another scene, he stays in hiding
until the bad guys kill an innocent old man,
only then deciding to jump out and fight. Nice
guy.
I don't want to talk about the movie's "story"
any further, though I don't think I could find
anything else to talk about even if I wanted to.
Instead, I just want to talk about what else the
movie has to offer - more exactly, I want to
talk about just how equally bad
everything else is. Just name a typical aspect
found in a movie and I'll tell you how it's
screwed up here. The musical score? Triumphant
music during a rape sequence, and elsewhere
sounding like a six year old boy drumming on
coffee cans and water pipes. Cinematography?
Blurred and dark, with murky visuals even during
the brighter sequences. Just look at the
pictures with this review for a sample. Editing?
At one point in a fight sequence, the hero falls
to the floor unconscious, then in the next cut
he's suddenly on his hands and knees still
trying to fight. Later in the movie, our hero
strangles a guy by whipping a rope around his
neck - but we never actually see a shot of our
hero using or even just holding the piece
of rope. (Instead we just get extreme close-ups
of our hero's face during the sequence.) With
all that and much more, it is perhaps inevitable
that there is also at least one instance where
the editor had to reuse some footage that
previously played in the movie. Besides
sharing a lot of the problems that you find in
other bad movies, the movie
manages
to conjure up it's own unique awfulness to a
large degree, which comes in the form of
questions. For example: If the bomb our hero
uses to destroy that aforementioned shack has a timer, why does
it also have a fuse attached to it? How come
at one point when our hero returns to the bar,
he has to join a line where entering patrons get
poison dust blown off of them - but at no other
time previously or subsequently does he have to
do this? If there is still an organized
government and an army, why are so many
defenseless people choosing to live out in the
wasteland where they are in more danger? How is
it possible that our hero's family lives in a
house where inside there are windows as well as
strong and smooth wood walls... but the outside of
the house is a rusted-out tin warehouse with
no windows? Okay, maybe I spent more time
thinking about these kind of things than the average
person, but I had to have something to do
while watching this movie.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Neon
City, Omega Doom,
Stryker
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