Former karate champ Chuck Norris continued his
ascendance to B-movie stardom with this lifeless martial-arts saga, which tries
to compensate for its myriad shortcomings by showcasing long scenes of Norris
in action. Karate aficionados may find this picture more satisfying than the
actor’s previous flick, Good Guys Wear
Black (1978), but, as always, catering to a niche audience is the easiest
way to alienate everyone else. Accordingly, viewers hoping for things like
believable acting, intriguing drama, and passable writing should direct their
attention elsewhere. Model-turned-actress Jennifer O’Neill stars as Mandy Rust,
the lone female on a San Diego police unit tasked with investigating narcotics
activity in the city. When two cops from the unit are murdered via karate, Mandy
persuades her boss (Clu Gulager) that everyone on the unit needs martial-arts
training. Then she recruits title contender Matt Logan (Norris), who runs a
local dojo, for the job. Predictably, Matt gets drawn into the investigation,
suffers a horrific personal loss that makes him vengeful, and helps the police
take down the drug kingpin who ordered the hits on the cops. There’s also a
twist involving a corrupt detective, a quasi-romance between Mandy and Matt,
and a touchy-feely subplot concerning Matt’s guardianship of a plucky teenager.
It’s all very rote, with nary an original idea in evidence, and the
storytelling is turgid in the extreme. Scenes plod along aimlessly, and the
only thing flatter than the writing is the acting. Norris is awful, since he
had not yet learned to emulate Clint Eastwood’s less-is-more approach, so his
line deliveries sound awkward and his “emoting” is pathetic. O’Neill is almost
as bad, a delicate beauty preening her way through the absurd role of a tough
street cop. Gulager borders on camp with his twitchy take on the clichéd role
of a put-upon top cop, and Ron O’Neal (of Superfly
fame), who plays one of the officers on the drug unit, waffles between distracted
indifference and silly swagger. In short, if you want to see an in-his-prime
Norris deliver lightning-fast punches and walloping roundhouse kicks, A Force of One will satisfy for needs.
Beyond that? Not so much.
A
Force of One: LAME
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