I must admit that I wasn't harboring much of any grant expectations to this 1987 martial arts action movie. But still, I opted to watch it, as I grew up with movies like this, but oddly enough I actually never had seen "Rage of Honor" before now late in 2022.
Writers Robert Short and Wallace C. Bennett managed to deliver everything stereotypical for a late 1980s martial arts action movie. You have Shô Kosugi in the leading role, playing a police officer that quits his job in order to go on a vigilante murderous rampage in Buenos Aires.
Yeah, there were a lot of things wrong with the storyline here, if you take a step back and look at it with a pair of realism goggles. I mean, for starters, a police officer that quits his job to go on a murderous rampage in a foreign country. How messed up is that? But, hey it is a movie, and is does make for some good old fashioned cheesy 1980s martial art entertainment. And then there were Japanese ninjas for some reason in Buenos Aires. Sure, why not?
The acting performances in "Rage of Honor" were as to be expected from a late 1980s martial arts action movie. But at least you know what you get with a guy such as Shô Kosugi, right?
There is a good amount of action and martial arts in the movie, some of it good, some of it dubious.
If you enjoy the 1980s martial arts movies, then "Rage of Honor" is definitely a movie that you will enjoy. And I think I would have enjoyed that way more back in 1987, when I was 12 years old, more than I did today in 2022 as a 47 year old.
My rating of director Gordon Hessler's 1987 "Rage of Honor" lands on a five out of ten stars.