Something of a precursor
to the Mad Max franchise, this
interesting but problematic sci-fi/action picture follows a principled
mercenary in postapocalyptic New York City. Written and directed by Robert
Clouse of Enter the Dragon fame, the
story suffers from underdeveloped characters, so it unfurls as a series of
incipient notions stretched out to feature length and padded with chases and
fights. Had a little more brainpower been devoted to the script, the movie
could have evolved into something special; as is, the picture loses momentum
somewhere around the two-thirds mark and never fully recovers.
In The Ultimate Warrior’s grim futuristic
vision of New York, small factions of people band together for survival. One
group, which resides inside a heavily fortified apartment building, is a
pacifistic enclave led by the Baron (Max von Sydow). The Baron’s son, Cal
(Richard Kelton), has genetically engineered seeds for growing vegetables—which
were nearly wiped off the planet during a nuclear war—so the Baron has
fantasies of relocating his group to a safer environment where they can restart
civilization. Also operating in New York is a roving band of killers and
thieves led by the brutal Carrot (William Smith); Carrot’s crew looms outside
the gates of the Baron’s facility as a constant existential threat. Enter
Carson (Yul Brynner), a muscular fighter who offers his services to the highest
bidder. The Baron woos Carson with an offer of extra rations and female
companionship, so Carson engages in a series of battles with Carrot’s people
before leading a desperate escape mission.
In principle, this basic storyline
should work just fine—good versus evil, with a morally ambiguous avenger caught
in the middle. Unfortunately, the narrative is riddled with plot holes. Carson
seems to be the only mercenary working the circuit. Security at the Baron’s
place is ridiculously weak. Carson proves ineffective at preventing tragedy,
basically undercutting the entire premise of the movie. Carrot’s thugs behave
nonsensically, threatening the very people whose agricultural experiments could
ensure their survival. Worse, a number of subplots about friction within the
Baron’s crew show promise, only to be discarded in favor of a trite mano-a-mano
showdown between Carrot and Carson. The
Ultimate Warrior isn’t awful, by any stretch, thanks to tasty production
design and a zippy score by Gil Melle, to say nothing of Von Sydow’s gentle
performance. However, the picture isn’t nearly what it could be, Brynner’s
impassiveness gets tiresome after a while, and B-movie stalwart Smith is
underused.
The Ultimate Warrior: FUNKY
1 comment:
The early image of Yule on top of a sort of slave-block, striking a manly pose and waiting to be hired, seems way ahead of it's time. That was enough of an image to get me hooked into the proceedings as a kid. But it was all pretty pedestrian if I recall. Maybe needs a remake with The Rock?
Post a Comment