Prior to
costarring in this low-budget thriller, Bong Soo Han applied his martial-arts
mastery to movies by training Tom Laughlin to fight for the Billy Jack movies, and by playing the
villain in “A Fistful of Yen,” the epic Enter
the Dragon spoof that comprises most of The
Kentucky Fried Movie (1977). The Billy
Jack movies are cult classics, and “A Fistful of Yen” is hilarious, so Master
Han should have quit while he was ahead. Playing an American police detective
tasked with stopping an international assassin, Han gives a lifeless
non-performance in Kill the Golden Goose, creating the impression that he spoke all of his
English-language dialogue phonetically. Anyway, the picture’s real star is another martial-arts champion with
zero onscreen charisma, the hulking Ed Parker. He plays “Mauna Loa,” a hit man
hired to kill three witnesses whose testimony could help a government
investigation topple a corrupt oil company. Simply because he has more screen
time as well as a love interest, Mauna Loa functions as the story’s protagonist,
even though he’s a one-dimensional murderer. And so it goes throughout this thoroughly rotten flick, which trudges through various dull suspense-movie clichés—brutal murders, clandestine
meetings, resourceful moves by dogged investigators, blah, blah, blah. Every so
often, either Han or Parker gets into a martial-arts fight, but those scenes
underwhelm, as does everything else. In fact, only two weird scenes grab the
viewer’s attention. In one, characters attend a costume party at a disco (watch
for the shot of someone wearing a vintage Planet of the Apes mask), and in the other, a ridiculous ballad
underscores a scene of Mauna Lao getting it on with his lady. Dig the lyrics:
“I want to climb all over you and crawl inside your mind—I want to caress you
like a summer breeze and tickle your body with mine.” Wow.
Kill the Golden Goose: LAME
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