Back in the day, Fred
Williamson was nothing if not industrious, banging out movies at a rapid pace
regardless of whether he had stories worth telling; the guiding principle of
his Po’ Boy Productions seemed to be exploiting Williamson’s marginal box-office
power as much as possible before the party ended. Hence junk on the order of Mr. Mean, which Williamson reportedly
cobbled together during downtime while acting in the Italian-made war picture The Inglorious Bastards (1978), even
enlisting that film’s crew for help. Naturally, the pastiche story is not Mr. Mean’s strongest element, although it
should be said that one is hard-pressed to identify anything about Mr. Mean that could be appropriately
described as “strong.” The gist is that Mr. Mean (Williamson), whom everyone in
the picture actually calls by that name, is an American hit man summoned to
Italy because a mobster needs another mobster killed, but for political reasons
cannot task his own people with the murder. Intrigue of some sort ensues.
Almost completely bereft of characterization, emotion, logic, and momentum, Mr. Mean is a sloppy compendium of chase
scenes, fights, macho posturing, and shootouts. However, don’t let the
preceding list create the impression Mr.
Mean is exciting. A typically pointless scene features Williamson, wearing
a barely-there banana hammock, jogging in slow motion down a beach alongside a
generic Eurobabe. Yes, even though Mr.
Mean is ostensibly a thriller about an assassin, much of the picture feels
like a keepsake of Williamson’s Mediterranean vacation, or, worse, a narcissistic
celebration of beholding the glory that is Fred Williamson. If you dig Fred as
much as Fred does, then you might find something to enjoy here. If not, then
maybe the repetitive jams that R&B act the Ohio Players composed and
recorded for the soundtrack will shake your groove thang.
Mr. Mean:
LAME
5 comments:
I was a big Fred fan in the 70's. But when I saw MR. MEAN way back then, I was sorely disappointed. Fred is quite simply a terrible director. Despite all the films he directed they never improved....kind of like Jim Wynorski and Fred Olen Ray.
So basically the black Steven Seagal before Seagal.
Only as a director and Seagal does not direct(well...once). As a screen prescene Fred is great....he just can't direct.
I try to never miss a Crippy Yocard movie.
The editing and transitions were not good. I agree. He did capitalize on his popularity. Rome is a great place to shoot. With better direction and editing, it had potential. Pretty girls, scenery, and typical mob plot, it was par for the course. Just so choppy. Thanks for reviewing and offering feedback. Sam Alix
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