John Slade is hired to rescue a journalist named Frank Morris from a Sandanista prison in Nicaragua. He teams with Marta, a local woman, to carry out this mission, but then he's captured, to... Read allJohn Slade is hired to rescue a journalist named Frank Morris from a Sandanista prison in Nicaragua. He teams with Marta, a local woman, to carry out this mission, but then he's captured, tortured, and forced to deal with the fact that he's been betrayed.John Slade is hired to rescue a journalist named Frank Morris from a Sandanista prison in Nicaragua. He teams with Marta, a local woman, to carry out this mission, but then he's captured, tortured, and forced to deal with the fact that he's been betrayed.
- Houtman
- (as Paul Werner)
- Santiago
- (as Peter Gold)
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Man Shot in the Street
- (uncredited)
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Machine-Gun Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Truck Driver
- (uncredited)
- Soldier at Boat
- (uncredited)
- Thug
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
It's actually not half bad if you know what you're getting into and features a particularly enjoyable performance from the always superb John Steiner, here playing the hiss-able villain with much aplomb.
I've also got to say that this film features undoubtedly one of the most beautiful actresses I have ever had the pleasure to behold, Melonee Rodgers; Every time she appeared on screen, I instantly forgot the films many shortcomings.
There's a fair bit of action throughout, most of it fairly well executed bar a few instances whereby the budgetary constraints overtly reflect in some of the set pieces - but hey, this is a B-Movie after all.
I've got to say though, that if there is one major underlying problem with this movie then it sadly concerns our hero played by a young Frank Zagarino. To describe his acting skills as wooden here would be to praise him unduly; Even the foliage he hides behind throughout the film outshines him! The scene in which he tries desperately to wring out some emotion following the death of his wartime buddy is utterly hilarious though. In fact not since that king of B-movie bad acting, the mighty Reb Brown, demonstrated a similarly painful to watch sequence in Strike Commando following the death of a small native boy, has there been such a rivetingly awful instance of an on screen performance.
Overall grade: 6.5/10
Anyways, "Striker" is the type of cheap exploitation B-movie cinema that simply remains irresistible to me. Even after seeing hundreds of lousy and incredibly cheap action flicks like these, I still look forward to the next. What makes them so addictive? They're Italian, produced during the late 80s, exaggeratedly anti-communist, copycatting all the glorious one-man-army classics starring Sylvester Stallone or Chuck Norris, Enzo G. Castellari directing, cast full of familiar sleazy faces, body count easily surpassing 200, misplaced drama & romance, ...
This one becomes extra hilarious if you think of it as an exploitation version of "Dennis the Menace". John Slade, the lead hero played by terrible actor Frank Zagarino, undeniably looks like Dennis the Menace with his boyishly cute face and blond hair. Moreover, Slade takes a slingshot on his mission into the Nicaraguan jungle with him and fires off bullets into his opponents' foreheads with it! Go Dennis. Slade's actual mission is to liberate leftwing journalist and former fighting buddy Frank Morris, but there are communist betrayers and double-crossers everywhere. "Striker" is lots of fun and insanely violent. Zagarino is a worthless action hero, but the supportive cast is great, with John Steiner hilariously overacting as the Russian baddie, Werner Pochath as the unreliable Dutch helicopter pilot, and the always charismatic John Philip Law. The unthankful but obligatory female lead is for Melonee Rodgers. She's unbelievably beautiful and not even that bad an actress. She only appeared in a handful of movies, which is quite a shame.
Judging by the period of release, the filming locations, the similar cast lists, and the cool cameo appearance of beefcake Daniel Greene in the last shot, I'm guessing "Striker" was made back-to-back with "Hammerhead". That's how I know Enzo G. Castellari: quick, dirty, and cost-efficient!
Did you know
- Quotes
[last lines]
John Slade: I hate violence.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Project Eliminator (1991)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1