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Delta Force One: The
Lost Patrol
(1999)
Director: Joseph Zito
Cast: Gary Daniels, Mike Norris, Bentley Mitchum
(Note: So, Dante, you think that just because you sneaked in
your own
review of this movie a few days before I was scheduled to put this one of
mine up, that you'll scare me off? Uh-uh, buddy! Read it and weep!) In my recent review of
Escape To Grizzly Mountain, it gave me a
chance to update the whereabouts of legendary schlock producer Menahem Golan.
Upon reading it, you probably wondered about what every happened to Golan's
cousin and frequent collaborator, Yoram Globus. (Okay, for the sake of giving me
something to start this review with, pretend you did.) Well, if the so-called
"Go-Go boys" were a rock group, Globus could be called "the quiet one", since he
has never had as much chutzpah as his more prominent cousin - he has
never stepped in front of the camera for a bit part, he has never tried
directing, and he has been less prone to making grandiose production plans to
the media. When Cannon collapsed in the late '80s, he stayed on a few years to
crank out a few more direct-to-video movies, and did the same subsequently with
Global Pictures. For a time he was on the MGM board, but was fired when he
enacted an unsuccessful scheme to gain leadership of the company. Subsequently,
he returned to Israel where he currently owns a chain of movie theaters, and
where he recently formed his own production company (Frontline Entertainment),
whose planned movies have that unmistakable old taste of Golan/Globus to them.
Oh yes, in the several years of his relative
silence between Cannon's final death and his
fresh start in Israel, Globus did one time
manage to
get everything together long enough to
be able to make one movie during the doldrums -
Delta Force One: The Lost Patrol.
It's not surprising that Globus made a movie
about the Delta Force, because it's long been a
favorite topic of B movie makers who don't live
in the United States. Israelis made the original
two Chuck Norris Delta Force
movies, (plus a third in-name only sequel
directed by Sam Firstenberg), as well as the
Operation Delta Force series
(produced by Avi and Danny Lerner). The Italians
got into the Delta Force twice with the two
Delta Force Commando films. Quite a good
deal of publicity for a squadron that the U.S.
Government to this day does not admit actually exists! One
possible reason might be that existence of the
Delta Force may be denied is that, except for
The Delta Force, these Delta Force
movies have been incredibly painful to watch,
with unexciting action as well as sub-par
production values - and there are a lot of
people who will freely place guilt on
association with something bad, as you well
know.
Even before actually watching DFO:TLP,
I had an idea that this Delta Force themed movie
might yet be another stinker to add to the
slowly growing list. Not just because that it
was produced by Yoram Globus, but by the fact
that despite being snapped up by a major video
label for its North American release, it took
three years from that above 1999 date of
completion to actually get its video release.
And you'll probably be hard-pressed to find a
copy - despite being released by a major video
label, and that I live in one of the 15 highest
populated cities in Canada, I could only find
one video store in my city that bothered to
stock it. Upon actually viewing the movie, I
could understand why all the other video stores
in my city were reluctant to pick it up. At
first glance, it does appear to be a
terrible movie; it was apparently made on a very
tight budget, and it doesn't seem that
determined to give us plentiful scenes of action
(and the little action there is is not up to the
usual standards us B movie aficionados expect.)
Plus, the performances are, to put it mildly,
inadequate. The movie could be used as further
proof that John Rhys-Davis - the one
professional of the cast - has the opinion that
one movie of quality he appears in (like
The Fellowship Of The Ring) makes up for
twenty or so subsequent passionless quickie
performances in garbage movies like this.
That's one way to look at Delta Force One:
The Lost Patrol. But while I was
watching it, I remembered that real life -
including military life - is often quite
different from how it is depicted in the movies.
For example, the "whistle" of an incoming
projectile on an actual battlefield sounds
completely different from the dropping-in-pitch
whistle heard in the movies. When I remembered
that little piece of trivia, my perspective on
the movie immediately changed. I could then see
that instead of being a bad example of an action
movie, it was
possibly instead a look at just
how it really is on the battlefield, and that
people actually react this way in real life in
this environment. After all, even the biggest
wars have never been constant shoot-ups - they
have been stretches of tedium and deep planning
between quick bursts of firepower. This movie is
a great tool to teach viewers various aspects
regarding not just things related to combat, but
other things as well. True, there are some
things in this movie that many viewers will be
familiar with. Most viewers will already know
that villainous male individuals coming from the
former Soviet Union are always named "Ivan",
that people twenty (or five) feet away from
people fighting in a closed environment will not
hear the various smacks and grunts coming from
the combat, that the subsequent unconscious
bodies coming from the fights will not be found,
and that terrorist leaders will hold off killing
captured adversaries even when the executing of
their big plans is at hand.
But the movie shows us a lot more that most
viewers won't already know. Take, for example,
what it teaches us about the United Nations'
peacekeeping force. Well, the force in this
movie is actually named the International Peace
Collation due to a little thing called
copyright, but it's clear what this force is
really representing. Anyway, we learn a great
deal about the peacekeeping force, both about
the people in it and the tactics and equipment
they use. We learn peacekeeping is a great way
for member nations to place any hotheaded and
trigger-happy soldiers they have long had
problems with. Patrol squadrons are apparently
made up by randomly assigning soldiers, even if
some of those selected have a big personal beef
with someone else chosen for the patrol. Should
a man or woman selected happen to be former
lovers, that's okay as well, and they can feel
free to have sex during their mission. Of
course, someone else should be on guard duty
during the time, but said guard doesn't have to
bother to carry a weapon with them at the time.
It's not like they are exactly well armed, by
the way; even if a mission involves going into
hostile territory, each soldier is given just
one combat rifle and one clip to go with it.
This may sound illogical, but this is explained
with the statement that they have "orders not to
engage."
Actually, they also take a .44 Magnum with them,
one that apparently carries more than six shots
in it, which comes in handy in doing some crude
minesweeping, where in the middle of the night
they speed across a minefield and somehow manage
to shoot out a mine with just about every shot
in the darkness. At least this technique is
better than their other minesweeping method,
which involves sending out someone on foot to
walk across the field until he manages to step
on a mine, stepping
down
at just the right angle so the mine won't
explode. It's a good thing these peacekeepers
are so resourceful, because their home base
doesn't seem that interested in giving them
extra protection. Come to think of it, maybe
not. It's true that these peacekeepers are made
to do their patrols in old-fashioned jeeps
instead of the tanks and hummers many modern
armies use. And the fact they are open-aired
does indeed lead to little protection against
machine-gun fire coming from hostile forces that
position themselves on a ridge right above the
jeeps. But these jeeps do seem to be
well-armored; if a projectile coming from a
rocket launcher should hit the open interior of
the jeep, the jeep will overturn, but it will
remain remarkably intact. And should the
projectile instead hit the front of the jeep,
the hood covering the engine will get blown off,
but the jeep will still manage to keep going.
It's also fortunate for the peacekeepers that
hostile Arab forces (remember, this is a Yoram
Globus movie) are exceptionally poor shots. Even
if there are ten or so of them on a ridge about
the height of a second story house right above
peacekeeper jeeps, and that they all repeatedly
fire their multi-shot rocket launchers for
several minutes, the most hits they will ever
make on said peacekeepers will be two. Besides
illustrating their poor tactics on the
battlefield (which also includes placing a man
with a large two-handed machine gun on a camel's
hump), the movie teaches us many different
things about Arab culture. It is revealed that
even in Arab countries that require women to
wear a head scarf and unrevealing apparel, male
Arab trackers hired by the peacekeepers will not
only not object to riding with a woman, but a
woman who is not dressed very conservatively.
(Their possible objection might be blocked from
possible confusion of the wildly differentiating
uniforms the peacekeepers wear.) Mysterious and
unnamed Arab leaders can somehow teach
peacekeepers their names without them (or anyone
else) speaking to these peacekeepers. Speaking
of... well, "speaking", there are interesting
things about Arab languages heard here. Arabs
like to have thoughtful-sounding and
profound-sounding conversations, and it would be
even more interesting to listen to had there
been subtitles. Subtitles aren't actually needed
at times, because the Arabs (even those who are
children) are prone to suddenly speaking an
English sentence in a conversation, even if they
are talking to another Arab.
There's a lot more to learn in Delta Force
One: The Lost Patrol that fit in these,
and other, categories. We get further proof that
nuclear explosions always explode in one of five
particular ways (and always in one of five
particular settings.) We learn peacekeepers are
so gutsy, that they won't radio in for
assistance in a tough situation, or to report on
a tough situation they just escaped out of. That
peacekeepers will also let out war whoops of
victory after getting out of an antsy situation
that cost the lives of some of their comrades.
That upon seeing
peacekeepers,
Arab nomads requesting humanitarian assistance
will run to them in a threatening way while
brandishing weapons. That terrorists will
negotiate with a corruptible government official
to smuggle in a nuclear device a day before it
is scheduled to arrive. That a little boy can
run back and forth from the middle of the desert
into civilization more than once in one day, and
still on foot catch up with the peacekeepers
before the day is through. That apparently a
nuclear missile can be launched from the floor
of a big cave precisely into a long and narrow
hole in the ceiling that is barely wide enough
to fit the missile in (that is, if you don't
count the fins.) With the assistance of Bentley Mitchum
(grandson of Robert), we learn that
peacekeepers, for some reason, are prone to
dyeing their hair an extremely unconvincing
shade of black. And Mike Norris (son of Chuck) shows that a full
head of hair isn't always hereditary.
About the only thing the movie doesn't reveal is
if there is possibly anybody who'd get anything
positive out of watching it. Personally, the
only thing this movie gave me was enough
material in order to write this week's movie
review. The only other people I would ever
suggest this movie to are Dante over at
Dante's Inferno so he can fully illustrate
the movie's incompetence depicting military
forces and techniques (well, not anymore), and Ken over at
Jabootu (so
he can have the opportunity to further detail
this movie's constant ineptness.) GentlemAn, I
await your reviewX.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: Behind
Enemy Lines,
Overkill,
Trackdown
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