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Breaking Point
(1976)
Director: Bob Clark
Cast:
Bo Svenson, Robert Culp, John Colicos
If you were to go up to Bo Svenson and call him a Joe Don Baker wannabe to
his face, you can bet he wouldn't be very happy to hear that
(though he'd be
somewhat less unhappy just before he felt he had to rub his sore knuckles.) For
one thing... who on earth would want to be compared to Joe Don Baker, an actor
once of some prominence who faded away, but to reappear years later as a parody
of himself? Though it's also very likely that Bo would be upset by that remark
simply because it's more or less true. It's not just because he replaced Baker
in the second and third entries in the Walking Tall series, but
for the fact that, with a few exceptions like
Special Delivery, he started to appear in the same kind of movies
that Joe Don Baker was appearing in. In other words, cheap and cheesy B-grade
action movies, among them Portrait Of A Hitman, Delta Force Commando,
and Thunder Warrior I and II. With that setup I have
just written, you are probably guessing that Breaking Point is
typical of the product Svenson (as well as Baker) is known for. Not quite - see,
Breaking Point is instead a cheap and cheesy Canadian
B-grade action movie. Actually, despite it being a Canadian production, it's
not really any different from the American
product Svenson was appearing in during this
period. Those who are somewhat familiar with
Canadian genre movies will have correctly
guessed that the characters in this movie are
American, and even though a little of the movie
actually does take place in Canada, the majority
of the scenes take place in America - no doubt
due to the fact that the Canadians who worked on
this movie believed that no one - Canadian or
otherwise - would be interested in watching a
movie about Canadians. (Which, sadly, is
probably true.)
Still, you can still see a little Canadian-ness here and there, such as the
movie taking place in the winter, and that Bo Svenson's character is a hockey
nut. Named Michael, he works as a judo instructor (!) in Philadelphia. One
night, coming home from a hockey game, he stumbles across two hoods beating the
crap out of some nerd so much that the nerd dies not long afterwards. After chasing
them away, Michael is asked by the city's police chief (Culp) if he'll identify
the hoods and testify against them in court. First Michael seems willing....
then he isn't... and then (eventually) he breaks down and agrees to cooperate,
in a long sequence that never gives us any real explanation to this erratic behavior of his. This is by no means the only puzzlement the movie has to offer
- soon afterwards, it becomes clear that we will never find out just who
that nerd was, and never find out why the hoods carried out a hit on him.
Putting that aside, I am fairly confident that you have some sort of idea as
to where this movie is going. If not, let me just mention that previously we
learned that
Michael is happily married, acting as a father to his cute stepson,
and his wife carrying his biological child... that Michael has a sister who is
engaged to a really really really nice guy... he has a good relationship with
the actual father of his stepson... and he has a really really really nice lady
working as a receptionist at his dojo. Aw, aren't they nice people?... Oh, spare us
- I'm sure by now that it's obvious that with Michael going to testify against
some shady characters, these lovely people are soon going to be under a major
threat. Though this setup sounds really obvious in this description, it's
actually plays even worse than it sounds, since all of these friends and family
of Michael have been given no personality and only a smidgen of time - they are
dragged momentarily to blab something inconsequential so we know they are there
and that they're "nice", and subsequently they are almost immediately put to the
side where they won't be seen until it starts to hit the fan. The only thing
surprising about this setup is that instead of
the inevitable bad-guy-behind-it-all ordering
his goons to finish off the hero is not
going up for trial; here, it's the goons on
trial and the inevitable bad-guy-behind-it-all
trying to save them (though additional goons are
brought in to do the job; the end results might have been
more interesting had the B.G.B.I.A. actually
done the work himself.) The B.G.B.I.A. in this
movie is Vincent Karbone (Colicos - ever notice
how many Canadian actors have unconventional
last names?), a Philadelphia construction king
that Culp's character is desperate to have thrown
behind bars because... well, aside from
authorizing (presumably) that beating, we
never find out what's so evil about this
guy. Heck, he doesn't seem to be that powerful,
since he not only gets orders from an (offscreen)
Godfather character, he only seems to have five
goons currently on his payroll. Anyway, Karbone
puts the heat on, but Michael holds out and
successfully testifies, and the murderous goons are put
behind bars. Even the dumbest criminal at this
point would see it pointless to keep going after
Michael and his loved ones, but the vengeful Karbone keeps it
up, even managing to strike at Michael when he
and the family go into hiding, blah blah blah
- you know the drill - until the inevitable
point when Michael decides he'll have to fight
back by himself. I might have sounded
impatient in that last sentence. Well, it's not
from the fact that it was quite predictable not
long into the movie just what eventually was
going to happen, but from the fact that it takes
over an hour to get there. Not just an hour, but
a very slow and mostly uneventful hour. This is
one of the fatal flaws of Breaking Point,
in that this warm-up is so badly handled. I
think most of us agree that people attracted by
the premise of the movie will be mostly
attracted by the gimmick of an ordinary man
getting the chance to inflict major damage
against criminal scum. Of course, they will
realize that the movie first has to take several
minutes to properly set up the situation, so
that the hero not only has proper motivation,
but our blessing in our eyes. Breaking
Point does do this, but stretches it out
to unbelievable lengths, padding out the various
tragedies inflicted against the protagonists
with the protagonists arguing, wringing their
hands, and trying to adjust to their new
identities after going into witness protection.
It may sound crude, blunt and uncomfortably
honest, but face it - we watch these movies just
to see some sweet violent revenge, not to see
innocent people acting like wimps and dolts
under pressure, especially for such unbelievable
lengths of time. After all, a self-proclaimed
action movie is supposed to have action
in it. Though Walking Tall wasn't
exactly a work of art, it at least showed the
hero starting to fight back not long after he
was first victimized. Then when Michael
decides to get going and fight back, it proves
to be a big letdown. For one thing, since
Karbone only has those five
goons, this
certainly limits the number of action sequences,
especially since one scene involves Michael
fighting two of Karbone's goons at the same
time, and an additional goon is later eliminated
from the movie when he simply drives away and is
forgotten about. That leaves just three
sequences where Michael fights back, and though
each sequence is quite different from the
others, they are all equally boring. The fact
that one of the cars in a chase sequence
involves a Volvo(!) should give you an idea how
sluggish this 30 m.p.h. chase is, as well as the fact that one
part of the chase shows a long sequence
of the other car stuck in the middle of road
while trying to make a U-turn. The next action
sequence is a shootout in a train yard, where no
one else in sight despite it taking place in the
middle of the day and that the train yard is
right next to a commercial district. The
unexciting techniques used by the participants
here are nothing we haven't seen before,
including the tired old "kicking the toilet
stall doors open one by one" routine. And the
final sequence at a deserted construction yard
at night is equally sluggish, though there is
one mildly eye-catching visual involving
Karbone's office. After that, the movie finally
has its mind to have mercy on its audience,
because right after Karbone is taken care of,
the movie immediately ends. There is also a
little action before Michael starts taking care
of business, but it's even more poorly handled
than what I described in the previous paragraph.
One sequence involving an (implied) rape tries
to be nasty, but the unsubtle way the woman's
dress is ripped off right before our eyes
provokes laughter instead of horror. The other
actions the goons take are equally ridiculous,
like when they apparently waited for one of
their victims to walk up to the edge of a pond
before chucking a Molotov cocktail at him. There
is nothing frightening about Karbone or his
goons - in fact, Karbone himself spends almost
all of his screen time behind a desk. In a
desperate attempt to make this seated character
menacing, Colicos hams it up with screaming his
dialogue with a very bogus European accent. He
and his equally hammy goons come across as a
bunch of incredible idiots, who only get away
with what they are doing because the
protagonists are almost as stupid as they are.
Though Culp and Svenson don't overact, they give
very lazy performances. When Culp tries to act
intense, it comes across as a bad case of
constipation, though in fairness to him he was
also limited by the fact most of his scenes are
also behind a desk. And while Svenson does have
one good scene when he gets some bad news on the
phone and struggles not to cry, the rest of the
time he gives off an attitude that he just pain
doesn't care about what he's supposed to do in
any particular scene, that he's just going
through the motions just hard enough to get his
paycheck. With the quality of the effort
behind the camera, I can't really blame for
Svenson not showing any enthusiasm. As I've
already indicated, the script is derivative as
well as boring, but there's also no effort to
try and beef up the story with the direction.
Veteran tax-shelter director Bob Clark (Porky's,
Black Christmas), except for some
fairly nice-looking night sequences, shows no
sense of visual flair. He doesn't seem to think
that there is more to directing action or even
dialogue than just pointing the camera in the
direction of whatever is happening. Every
location looks shabby and unspectacular, and the
cheesy feeling of this movie is accentuated by
the gawdawful musical score, which blares its
strident chords throughout the movie. The
closest I can describe it with the written word
is if a traffic jam managed to ingest helium.
The electronic chords are so screechy and loud,
not only was the dialogue frequently drowned
out, it gave me a headache. That's no
exaggeration - it gave me a bona fide headache.
The opening credits proclaim "MUSIC BY DAVID
MCLEY WITH A DIGITAL PDP 11 COMPUTER", and it's
hard to believe the movie would proudly proclaim
this - though maybe it was Clark's way to assure
some of the inevitable blame would be assigned
to someone else. To be fair, I must admit that
I found some parts of the movie entertaining,
though
not for reasons intended by the makers of
the movie. I got a big laugh out of the
extremely unconvincing wigs the family wears
when they go into hiding (as well as the fact
that with a beard and glasses, Svenson is made
to look like a university professor.) Another
funny part came when a shot of the CN Tower
comes with "TORONTO" written in extremely
big letters on the screen. But these and a few
other unintentionally amusing moments in no way
make up for the sheer boredom the rest of the
movie generates. Aside from possibly being a tax
shelter for Astral Films, I simply can't see why
they went to all this effort to make something
that had some big problems obviously visible
even before filming started. Was there at any
time in the past an audience for this movie?
Could this movie ever find an audience in the
future? The answer to both of those questions is
the same for the question as to how often
Svenson's character uses his judo skills outside
of his classes - never.
UPDATE: William Olson sent this along: "I read your
review on Breaking Point, it's not a low
budget film. Bob Clark mentioned it was the most
expensive Canadian film back then (1976). He
said it was 3 million US. 3 million is 12 to 15
million in today's budgets! Looks cheap, so
someone got rich, probably Astral's producers.
I know 20th Century Fox only owns the US rights,
so most likely Fox had nothing to do with rising
of the budget. Svenson wasn't cheap, but not
expensive. Oh well."
Check for availability on Amazon.
See also: The
Annihilators,
Keaton's Cop,
Legacy Of Rage
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