Graded on one very
specific curve, this blaxploitation joint earns a passing grade, but just
barely. The curve in question reflects the sad fact that most films directed by
Fred Williamson are awful. Judged by any other standard, the picture would fare
poorly. In any event, No Way Back is
the second flick to star Williamson as private dick Jesse Crowder, following
the character’s debut in Death Journey,
which was released the same year. (Sources differ as to which flick came first,
but since there’s no series continuity, pinpoint accuracy doesn’t really matter.)
Hired from his home base in Los Angeles to track down a missing person in San
Francisco, Jesse does his usual thing, seducing babes, smacking down bad guys,
and smooth-talking informants. As per the norm for Williamson’s Po’ Boy
Productions, the main order of the day isn’t telling a story so much as making
Williamson look cool and virile, though whether clothing the star in a series
of leisure suits with matching neck scarves actually accomplishes that goal is
open to question. No Way Back is
standard-issue schlock, a brainless action thriller with R&B jams on the
soundtrack, but it’s redeemed by fun elements.
The story, not that it matters
much, involves a bank executive named Pickens (Charles Woolf), who swindles
cash from his employers, then takes off with a sexy accomplice named Candy
(Tracy Reed). Complicating matters, she actually works for a gangster named Bernie
(Stack Pierce). Meanwhile, Pickens’ wife, Mildred (Virginia Gregg), searches
for her husband with less than noble intentions. It’s the usual drill of double
crosses and twists, with the resourceful Jesse caught in the middle. Where the
picture makes up ground is in the realm of vibe. Soul singers the Dells provide
smooth tunes for the soundtrack, Reed complements her beauty with respectable
acting, and the high-octane scenes have a measure of novelty, as when Jesse
literally rides to the rescue, on horseback, during the climax. There’s also a
mildly amusing subplot involving a hustler played by the iconic TV host Don
Cornelius. Is anything in No Way Back
original or special? Not even close. Does the film lag so badly at times that
it becomes almost narcotizing? You bet. But is No Way Back infinitely better than Death Journey? Affirmative. And given the incredibly low standards
one must embrace when appraising the Po’ Boy Productions filmography, that
faint praise earns No Way Back a halfhearted
checkmark in the “win” column.
No Way Back: FUNKY
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