A soulless thriller directed with palpable
indifference by Robert Clouse, The
Amsterdam Kill tells the uninteresting story of an ex-DEA agent who
sorta-kinda teams up with a Chinese drug lord in order to dismantle a heroin
cartel operating in Amsterdam and Hong Kong. Along the way, the duo’s exploits
reveal corruption among law enforcement, so by the end of the whole mess, the
antihero ex-DEA guy incarnates that hoariest of clichés, the Last Honorable Man
in a Dishonorable World. The presence of venerable big-screen bruiser Robert
Mitchum in the leading role would seem like reason enough to watch the picture,
but the combination of Mitchum’s bored performance and a periodically
incoherent storyline drains vitality from The Amsterdam Kill. Only the noisy intrusion of a violent action
scene every few minutes keeps The
Amsterdam Kill from seeming like an outright waste of film. Perhaps the
best one could say is that the picture is agile and brisk but also hopelessly
generic and pointless.
Things get started when aging drug dealer Chung Wei
(Keye Luke) decides to retire and sell information about his competitors to the
DEA. His exact motivation for doing so is never satisfactorily explained.
Rather than dealing directly with the agency, Wei contacts Larry Quinlan
(Mitchum), a disgraced former agent. Quinlan selects Hong Kong-based DEA agent
Howard Odums (Bradford Dillman) as his middleman. Also part of the mix is
Amsterdam-based DEA agent Riley Knight (Leslie Nielsen). Each time Wei gives
Quinlan a tip, Quinlan and his associates arrange a sting operation, but early
maneuvers go badly, revealing a leak in the DEA’s operation. Eventually,
circumstances throw Quinlan’s motivation into question, as well, particularly
once he becomes obsessed with plugging the DEA leak. How is that his problem? Very
little of what happens in The Amsterdam
Kill makes sense, but a lot of it is colorful and manly. Hell, Mitchum even
gets to use heavy construction equipment as a murder weapon during the finale.
The
Amsterdam Kill: FUNKY
Key Luke, Leslie Nielsen, and Robert Mitchum, and it's still a dud?! That is some messed up movie....
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