One of three features
costarring blaxploitation luminaries Jim Brown, Jim Kelly, and Fred
Williamson—the others are Take a Hard Ride
(1975) and One Down, Two to Go
(1982)—this muddled conspiracy thriller represents a missed opportunity on many
levels. Not only does director Gordon Parks Jr. fail to exploit the action-hero
possibilities created by the participation of his three stars, but the picture includes what should be the ultimate campy blaxploitation premise, only to botch
the notion’s potential via confusing storytelling, dull pacing, and flat
characterization. Bad guy Monroe Feather (Jay Robinson) creates a serum that,
when introduced into the water supply of major cities, will kill every black
person who consumes the serum. Yet instead of introducing this outlandish concept
right at the beginning, thereby positioning the titular trio as
African-American crusaders, the filmmakers take a good half-hour to get to the
point. Worse, the characters played by Brown, Kelly, and Williamson don’t join
forces until fairly late in the story, so Three
the Hard Way feels less like a men-on-a-mission picture and more like a hodgepodge
of scenes from three separate movies. The filmmakers also waste lots of time on
nonsense, such as the very long sequence of Brown’s character producing a
recording session for an R&B vocal group. And whenever Three the Hard Way tries to deliver the blaxploitation goods, the
material feels half-hearted. For instance, the scene of martial artist Kelly fighting off
something like a dozen armed assailants with his bare hands (and feet) is
ridiculous, especially because Parks can’t muster camera angles that properly accentuate the action. (The haphazard shooting style makes the encounter feel like a run-through instead of a fully realized scene.) And
then there’s the one truly bizarre sequence in the picture—at one point, the
heroes recruit three motorcycle-riding babes to doff their tops and then
interrogate a prisoner using some sort of sex torture. Like most
everything else in Three the Hard Way,
the scene is lurid but nonsensical.
Three the Hard Way: LAME
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