An action-movie star who
prioritized quantity over quality, Charles Bronson made a lot of forgettable
movies in his epic career, with the caliber of his projects suffering a
precipitous drop in the 1980s as the combination of Bronson’s advancing age and
his declining box-office appeal took a toll. Borderline captures the star in transition, because while the
horrors of endless Death Wish sequels
were still a couple of years in his future, it’s obvious the best material was
no longer coming Bronson’s way. Cowritten and directed by Jerrold Freedman, who
spent most of his career banging out generic TV movies, Borderline depicts the battle between U.S. Border Patrol Officer Maynard
(Bronson) and resourceful human trafficker Hotchkiss (Ed Harris). As the
well-financed Hotchkiss gets bolder and more ruthless with each illegal border
crossing, Maynard becomes more determined to capture the “coyote,” especially
after Hotchkiss murders one of Maynard’s deputies. And that’s basically the
whole story.
Attempts at injecting the people in the movie with genuine
characterization are feeble at best: Hotchkiss is a Vietnam vet, Maynard has a
drinking problem, and so on. Similarly, Freedman’s supporting characters are
feeble. Fresh-faced Border Patrol deputy Fante (Bruno Kirby) drifts in and out
of the story without ever making much impact, and the callous businessmen
backing Hotchkiss’ operation—rancher Carl Richards (Bert Remsen) and corporate executive Henry Lydell (Michael Lerner)—display slightly less than one
dimension each. A glimmer of hope for narrative substance emerges during a
sequence in which Maynard travels undercover as a Mexican to Tijuana along with
migrant worker Elena Morales (Karmin Murcelo), whose child was killed in the
same shootout that left the deputy dead, but like so many other threads in Borderline, Freedman doesn’t take this
material anywhere satisfactory or surprising.
Nonetheless, the subject matter
is inherently interesting, the southern California locations suit the story
well, and vivid actors pass through the movie. Beyond those mentioned, the cast
also includes Norman Alden, John Ashton, Wilford Brimley, and Kenneth McMillan.
Plus, since Bronson is strangely absent from many scenes—he’s either offscreen or simply bored—Harris steals the movie without trying. Borderline is sorta/kinda his movie
debut, seeing as how he’d played minor roles on television prior to Borderline, as well as a tiny
part in Coma (1978). He makes a hell
of an impression, personifying Hotchkiss as a believably cold-blooded automaton
since the sketchy script precludes the option of forming a proper
characterization.
Borderline:
FUNKY
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