Rivalisierende Banden suchen nach Millionen von Dollar, die in einem Luxuswohnheim versteckt sind, das abgerissen werden soll, aber zuerst müssen sie sich mit dem Hausmeister auseinandersetz... Alles lesenRivalisierende Banden suchen nach Millionen von Dollar, die in einem Luxuswohnheim versteckt sind, das abgerissen werden soll, aber zuerst müssen sie sich mit dem Hausmeister auseinandersetzen, der die Beute zuerst gefunden hat.Rivalisierende Banden suchen nach Millionen von Dollar, die in einem Luxuswohnheim versteckt sind, das abgerissen werden soll, aber zuerst müssen sie sich mit dem Hausmeister auseinandersetzen, der die Beute zuerst gefunden hat.
- Duke
- (as Justin Wooten)
- Manny
- (as JC Leuyer)
- Foreman
- (as Jim Chandler)
- Vince
- (as David J Halls)
- Social Worker
- (as Meaghan Deusner)
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Unlike what you might expect from a Dolph and Adkins movie, this plays off more like a drama in the first 50 minutes and only after that dipping heavily into the action. The story itself keeps you engaged with Dolph and Adkins as long as you're a fan of either actors, but does have its flaws. The building that's being blown up within 90 minutes doesn't have any 'rush' to it, most characters act rather casual and the few locations where there are explosions planted (and they can't use guns) end up having little impact either. There are also plenty of other little gripes (rarely reloading guns, gunshots echoing through the building with nobody outside noticing, people falling off the building while dozens are watching it, etc), but they don't really affect the enjoyment of the film and are semi-forgivable considering tons of action movies have these smaller 'flaws' as well.
While the characters of Dolph and Adkins are well-developed the bad guys are as generic and uninteresting as you can get and sadly the 'leader' of the bad guys is a stunt performer (Scott Hunter), but his fights ended up rather disappointing. As for the rest of the action scenes, they're well directed, choreographed, edited and performed.
Some transitions (especially at the beginning) felt a little rough and the soundtrack also wasn't great (and even slightly out of place at moments), but in general this is a well-made DTV film that will please any Dolph or Adkins film.
I was ready for a disaster and it did start slow and emotional, kind of depressing, but then it changed gears up and up, it got action, humor, blood, tears, in a more rounded package than the usual action movies.
The fights were violent and dirty, the way a street fight should be.
The ending was cooler than a big truck doing donuts at the golf course (on Bruce Willis retirement home) and then rolling coal on Bruce Willis! :D The lesson is that when underdogs get a windfall, it never comes in a silver plate, nope, it comes chained to two big raging bulldogs and it will take a lot of guts and blood to get it.
And it wasn't overdone. -It wasn't a bunch of guys from the gym deciding to make a movie. The story came first, and the fights made sense, the skills baked into the story rather than the story being an excuse for them. That's competence, right there. Competent scripting.
As for the realism... I mean, the moves were all recognized and real MMA tactics. Nobody walks away without getting hurt. Nobody flies through the air. And no 100 pound girls bring down man bears. (The film did feature a girl, and she fought like a girl. She was a mean b****, and you wouldn't want to run into her in a dark ally, but she was a girl and the script and action dealt with her very believably.)
And best of all.., it was a solid story featuring Good Guys and Bad Guys, and some grey guys in between. But the hero was.., heroic! Damn! How often do you see that?)
It was mid-budget, nothing fancy, nothing to mark it as a Block Buster or make it stick out in the culture swirl. Sadly, it won't be remembered. It didn't look like 'money', but it was competent and engaging and satisfying. Nothing about it was stupid. (Though, I was making "Hurry Up" motions with my hands at the hero when he found the money. "Get out! Go Go Go! Stop being.., a regular guy who isn't used to this kind of world and who is taking a moment to deal with a 3 Million Dollar windfall... Okay, I get it, but still... GO!")
But seriously. Competent. Engaging. Satisfying. Nothing stupid.
Those are pretty rock solid hashtags. In today's insane media landscape? Yes.
Recommended!
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- WissenswertesThe movie features Ida Sigrid Lundgren as Emily, the daughter of Richard Ericson (played by Dolph Lundgren). In real life Ida is also the daughter of Dolph Lundgren. Ida Sigrid Lundgren was born 1996 in Stockholm.
- Zitate
Richard Ericson: How do you feel like killing somebody?
Mike Wade: Pretty sure I already did kill somebody
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 4.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 12.974 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 30 Minuten
- Farbe