A bad movie that
occasionally manages to hold the viewer’s attention through a combination of
familiar faces and spectacle, Firepower
tells a convoluted story about mercenaries trying to kidnap a reclusive
billionaire whom the U.S. government hopes to prosecute for criminal acts.
Helmed by British action specialist Michael Winner, best known for Death Wish (1974), the picture showcases
a truly odd collection of actors: James Coburn, Sophia Loren, and O.J. Simpson
are the big names, while the supporting cast includes Billy Barty, Anthony
Franciosa, Vincent Gardenia, Victor Mature, Jake LaMotta (!), and Eli Wallach.
The plot is as overstuffed as the cast. In the opening sequence, Adele
(Sophia Loren) watches in horror as her husband, a pharmaceutical researcher,
dies in a lab explosion. Convinced her husband was murdered by operatives of a mysterious
industrialist named Karl Stegner, who owns a drug company that’s under
government investigation, Adele provides incriminating evidence to federal
agent Frank Hull (Gardenia). Frank wants to arrest Stegner, but Stegner lives
on a remote estate in the Caribbean, protected by anti-extradition laws. And
that’s when things get really confusing.
Frank seeks help from mobster Sal
Hyman (Wallach), who offers to kidnap Stegner in exchange for a blanket pardon.
Sal then calls in a favor from retired assassin Jerry Fanon (Coburn), who
agrees to do the Stegner job for $1 million. Yet Jerry’s got a secret of his
own. Jerry enlists his twin brother, Eddie, to . . . seriously, it’s not even
worth explaining. Firepower is
bewildering from a narrative perspective, but one gets the sense Winner realized
he was building a giant heap of nothing, because he cuts the movie at an
absurdly fast pace, rushing from chose scenes to double-crosses to explosions
to gunfights to nighttime invasions. At any given moment, lots of colorful
stuff is happening, even if it’s virtually impossible to know who’s doing what
to whom, or why.
Coburn somehow manages to emerge unscathed, his coolness seeing him through the movie’s muddiest sections, though others don’t
fare as well. Loren seems perplexed by her constantly changing
characterization, so she spends most of her time posing for Winner’s myriad
ogling shots of her cleavage. Simpson delivers his usual perfunctory work,
while stone-cold pros ranging from Gardenia to Wallach try to ensure that
individual scenes make as much sense as possible. For all his shortcomings on
this project as a storyteller, Winner compensates somewhat by shooting violence
well, so it’s possible to absorb the most vivacious scenes of Firepower as straight shots of
adrenalized nonsense.
Firepower:
FUNKY
3 comments:
It was suppose to be a Charles Bronson actioner, but he walked when the producers refused to cast his wife Jill Ireland opposite him.
Total Lew Grade ITC cheese, have a real soft spot for this, The Evil That Men Do and The Cassandra Crossing. Also features one of the best hilarious toy helicopter explosions ever, wonderful.
Does that poster win some sort of award for "most objects exploding in one image"?!
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