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Rage
(1995)
Director: Joseph Merhi
Cast: Gary Daniels, Kenneth Tigar, Fiona Hutchinson
I've tried very hard. Lord knows, I have
tried so hard. But you keep refusing to see the
truth. First I approached you as a friend, with
something secret that I wanted to share that I
felt would be welcomed and appreciated.
You
turned a deaf ear to my gestures of friendship.
So I dressed myself as an authority figure, so I
could repeat what I said earlier, though with a
commanding air. You just simply sneered and
looked in the other direction. It was then that
I got really desperate. I then decided to try
again, but to fight dirty this time, reaching to
your lower instincts and bribing you with
promises of joy. You resisted all of my charms.
So now it's come to this. As of now, my feet are
planted in your stomach, and my hands are held
tight to your collar. I am nose to nose with
you, and I am screaming in your face!
Not only that, I am slapping you in the face
back and forth with one hand, one way with the
palm side, and the opposite way with the back of
my hand. With each slap, I scream in your face,
"Don't you get it?!?" Then I grab
you with both hands again, and give you a
vigorous shake. And then I engage in another
slapping spree. Have I finally managed to hammer
into your skull what I have been trying to get
you to understand for so long? Since it's taken
this long without any kind of success, I kind of
doubt it, so it looks like I will have to repeat
myself once again. Let me tighten my grip on
your collar, press my face closer to yours, and
tell you what needs to be told.
There are a lot of movies out there. It's
pretty safe to say that most of them are
mediocre to poor. We are always seeking out the
ones that are good, sifting through the garbage
to get to the good stuff. So when we hear of a
good movie, we are inclined to seek it out,
right? Anything helps in the quest to find
suitable entertainment. For the longest time, I
have been speaking of the virtues of certain
movies, movies that are good and deliver the
entertainment they promise. But you have turned
a deaf ear to my recommendations. I don't get
e-mails from you stating that my reviews of
these certain movies drove you to watch them,
never mind liked them. When I get the Amazon
sales reports every quarter, I don't see that
you have all rushed to Amazon to purchase these
movies. And as I've stated before, I don't see
any of you have gone online to write about the
bountiful merits of these movies. What specific
movies am I talking about? I'm talking about
movies from PM Entertainment. For the past few
years, I have been praising the best this
company offered. Movies like
Last Man Standing,
The Sweeper,
The Underground,
and The Art Of Dying,
chock full of stuff like explosions, guns, and
broken glass. My love for these movies is
unbound; I've even written a haiku about them:
Glorious action / That's PM Entertainment /
Their movies kick ass. Not all PM movies are
great, but the ones that are deliver the goods
in such a spectacular way that I am genuinely
puzzled why their fanbase isn't higher, let
alone why you haven't gone to the
trouble to watch them.
I am determined to keep pressing PM
Entertainment on you until you get it. (Slap!)
The fight ahead for me is mixed. On the negative
side, I am starting to run out
of glorious PM
movies to review for this web site. On the other
hand, I've had a recent boost to my quest
because of the DVD boom. (DVD! Oooh, DVD! Etc.)
Many older movies have been reintroduced to the
public because of DVD, and that includes many
from PM Entertainment. Madacy Home Video has
gotten the rights to older PM movies (like
The Art Of Dying), and has released a
whole mess of them on DVD. More recently,
Universal Home Video and Kreative Digital
Entertainment have teamed up to release on DVD
PM Entertainment films that were made during
PM's peak - movies like
The Silencers
and Last Man Standing. Another of
these releases includes Rage,
directed by PM co-founder Joseph Merhi, and
starring martial arts star Gary Daniels (Epicenter
and Spoiler).
In the movie, Daniels plays Alex Gainer, an
elementary school teacher with a loving wife and
daughter. It's an idyllic life, one where it
seems no one questions just why he has a thick
foreign accent. But the peace and calm of his
life is shattered one day when while driving in
the neighborhood, he is carjacked by a crazed
man. The police soon catch up and surround the
two men, but they turn out to be corrupt cops.
The cops knock Alex out and transport him to a
secret laboratory, where he's injected with an
experimental drug that gives a man superhuman
strength. With his new powers, Alex manages to
escape - though The Powers Behind It All brand
him a mass murderer to the press, and he finds
he must keep running from the law.
Gary Daniels is in almost every scene of the
movie, so he has quite an acting burden to carry
though an hour and a half of screen time. He
does possess a "nice guy" demeanor that
automatically gives him some amount of sympathy
from the audience, and he does well in the
action sequences (even doing some of the
dangerous stuntwork himself.) It's a different
story when it comes to doing some bona fide
acting. His thick British accent sticks out like
a sore thumb, making his line delivery almost
comical at times. It doesn't help that there is
no real explanation ever given as to how this
Brit found his way to southern California,
making the movie seemingly too lazy to give us a
simple explanation. Another problem with
Daniels' performance is that he is seemingly
unable to express the title emotion. Though the
formula he's injected with is linked to episodes
of rage in the previous test subjects, at no
time did I feel that this character was almost
out of control in his behavior. Part of the
blame can fall on the fact that the character is
written to be too sharp-minded in his actions
during his various struggles, ingeniously using
his environment on several occasions to outwit
his enemies. But Daniels keeps the same
panic-stricken expression on his face no matter
the circumstances. This wouldn't have been so
bad if the character was more of an everyman
with normal powers, but it's completely wrong
for a character that's supposed to be out of
control and with superhuman abilities.
There are some better performances among the
supporting players. Dave Powledge plays a fat
slimy cop that's thoroughly corrupt, and he is
so effective in the role that it's a shame that
he exits the movie early on.
There's also a good
job done by Kenneth Tigar (Route
9) as a TV reporter who suspects
there's a lot more to this fugitive than the
authorities and his fellow newsmen are stating,
and is determined to find out the truth. Tigar
makes his character an honest one, one that
clearly wants a juicy story for his very own,
but is still deep down a decent human being that
can't help but have some personal feeling
towards what he is covering. He is supported
nicely by Jillian McWhirter (Last Man
Standing), who plays his camerawoman.
While I'm on the subject of newspeople, I might
add that it's this area where Rage
decides to go political, something which many PM
movies lean towards at one time or another.
Rage criticizes the state of which
news reporting often falls to, reporting the
sizzle instead of the steak, so to speak. None
of the other reporters in the movie seem
interested in looking at the other side of the
issue at hand, or seem to have any bit of heart
left like Tigar's character has. Wisely,
director Merhi doesn't spend a lot of time
preaching about this issue; doing so would only
slow things down, and it's something the
audience is already familiar with. Merhi is
succinctly sums it up with the statement, "New
school of reporting seems to be to see how far
you can truthfully shove your nose up a man's
ass!"
But neither the actors nor any messages are
the real stars of Rage. Once
again, it's the action sequences that shine and
make the movie worth seeing. Are they up to the
action sequences found in grade-A PM movies like
Last Man Standing and The
Sweeper? No, not quite; the action here
is a few notches below those two efforts. But
even a lesser PM action movie still beats the
pants off your typical made-for-video actioner,
and it must be admitted that it gets one or two
moments done brilliantly. For example, the movie
opens with a shootout where not just ordinary
people get shot, but several cops as well. From
that point on, there's no turning back as the
movie delivers the goods scene after scene. When
he makes a break to escape from the bad guys'
laboratory, Daniels first gets into a kung fu
fight while strapped in a strait-jacket. Then
when he's free, he grabs an Uzi and leaps and
bounds around the lab as he fires countless
rounds into everyone. Later, there's a chase
sequence on a freeway (which seems to be the
same strip of road used in the climatic chase in
The Underground) which uses not
one but two mack trucks, as well as a
school bus (no kids inside the bus, alas.) The
shopping mall climax contains (among other
things) a ton of broken glass, PM's
trademark. And what other movie can boast a kung
fu battle between the movie's hero and a couple
dressed in S&M clothing?
You may be wondering why, if there is
all this glorious action in the movie, why I
rank the movie's action below that from
Last Man Standing and The Sweeper.
Well, there are several reasons for that.
One
reason is that there is a slight reek of
cheapness and cost-cutting in a few of these
sequences. The laboratory, for one thing, is
pretty cheesy, tin foil lining and obvious false
walls. (It also appears they recycled some props
from Hologram Man, made around the
same time.) It distracts from the action that
soon takes place in it. Another reason is that
there are some technical flaws in some of these
scenes, flaws that distract and spoil the
momentum that has been building. For example,
during the freeway chase there is a multi-car
smashup, and for a brief moment you can see some
cables attached to the cars. In another scene,
Daniels is hanging on the ledge of a building,
and in one shot you can clearly see the safety
cable that's attached to him. There are a lot
more technical flubs I could go on about, such
as with the editing; key moments (such as the
actual injection of the formula) are missing and
momentarily jar the audience with confusion
about what's happening. But this is a PM movie -
don't you get it?!? (Slap!) Even a PM
movie that has a few flaws still beats the pants
off most made-for-video (and even a lot of
theatrical) action movies. What's that? You're
still reluctant? (Sigh) Okay then: Please
watch PM movies. Don't make me lower myself any
further.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: The Art Of
Dying, Last Man
Standing, The
Sweeper
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