Sometimes, a guilty
pleasure can be a lot of fun. Watching the straight-to-video, Lou
Ferrigno, action DVD “Instant Death” (**1/2 OUT OF ****) revived memories of
Charles Bronson’s “Death Wish” movies, Liam Neeson’s “Taken” trilogy, and the
Sylvester Stallone “Rambo” franchise. If you haven’t seen “Death Wish”
(1974), you’ll have a chance to watch Bruce Willis step into Bronson’s shoes
for the 2017 remake when it comes out later this year. Suffice to say,
“Death Wish” dealt with a mild-mannered New York City architect who embarked on
revenge binge after his wife’s murder and his daughter’s rape during a home
invasion. The Charles Bronson hero meted out vigilante justice from the barrel
of a revolver to a variety of low-life criminals that prowled the streets after
sundown. Ironically, he never found the hoodlums who terrified his
family. Nevertheless, while cleaning up
the city streets, he evolved into an urban legend. “Death Wish” qualified as
one of the notable examples of the revenge movie genre about a private citizen who
avenged his relatives after the police proved ineffectual.
“Skin Traffik”
director Ara Paiaya and scenarist Adam Davidson replicate the revenge movie
formula without tampering with any of the usual clichés. Were it not for
the steely presence of body-builder Lou Ferrigno, who rampaged on television as
“The Incredible Hulk” from 1977 to 1982, “Instant Death” would constitute just
another routine crime thriller. Indeed, Ferrigno is the star rather than merely
a supporting character or an actor appearing in a cameo. The 66-year old
Ferrigno performed all his stunts. Now, I know what you’re thinking. Can Ferrigno
act? Although he seems self-conscious around other actors, Ferrigno plays
a flawed father figure hero who might behave in such an aloof manner. The personification of the Grim Reaper,
Ferrigno’s paterfamilias suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. The realistic,
gritty action occurs primarily in contemporary London, and the filmmakers pit
the former “Hulk” against a repellent Cockney mobster nicknamed ‘Razor.’ Jerry
Anderson plays Razor, and he is a dead ringer for popular British tough-guy actor
Ray Winstone. Anderson plays such a deranged dastard that the actor
should think twice about strolling in public without bodyguards. Imaging
what Ferrigno’s revenge-minded father will do to Razor when they tangle
heightens the suspense of “Instant Death.”
Ferrigno plays
veteran Special Forces fighter John Bradley.
Although he has been out of combat for six months, Bradley hasn’t
recovered entirely from the untold horror. The lonely lifestyle that he
describes to his sympathetic psychiatrist recalls the toxic activities that
Robert De Niro’s cabbie Travis Bickle indulged in throughout director Martin
Scorsese’s classic, urban shoot’em up “Taxi Driver” (1976). The psychiatrist
recommends Bradley reconnect with his two surviving family members: his grown-up
daughter Jane (Tania Staite of “Crossing Bridges”) and his young granddaughter
Wendy (newcomer Sophie Wembridge), who live in London, England. Bradley
catches a flight out of New York City.
After he lands and sets out to visit Jane and Wendy, Bradley witnesses a
vicious gangland slaying. A ferocious underworld enforcer, Razor (Jerry
Anderson), is eradicating all rival drug dealers in his domain. Anybody
who peddles narcotics on Razor’s turf won’t die from old age. The
desperate fools who buy those forbidden narcotics don’t last long. Razor
is torturing an independent drug dealer, Carnie (Sven Hopla of “The Foundling”),
when Bradley sees the murder. Not only does Razor kill the rival drug dealer,
but he kills another innocent bystander who walks in front of Bradley when
Razor tries to shoot our hero. Razor
dispatches his intimidating henchmen to liquidate Bradley. Before he
eludes Razor’s thugs, Bradley guns down two of them.
A furious Razor
demands Bradley’s head. A young street hoodlum locates Bradley after he
shadows him to his daughter’s apartment building. Naturally, Jane is ecstatic
about finally seeing her dad again.
Bradley rarely spent time around his family while he was in the service.
He explains he must visit an old friend in town the next day. The old
friend turns out to be Colonel Neal (newcomer Michael James MacMahon) who
served with Bradley in the military. Essentially, Colonel Neal is
comparable to Samuel Trautman (Richard Crenna) from Sylvester Stallone’s
“Rambo” quartet. Trautman acted as the go-between Rambo and those who
availed themselves at his combat skills. Predictably, Razor and his hooligans
show up at Jane’s door inquiring about Bradley. When Jane cannot tell
them where her father has gone, Razor’s henchmen rape her on the dining room
table. Later, Razor brandishes a razor
and carves up Jane’s face. Before he leaves, Razor smothers helpless Wendy
with a pillow. After Bradley learns about his family, he launches his own
crusade of vengeance against Razor and his depraved crew.
“Instant Death”
resorts to neither humor nor comic relief characters. The violence is staged with a sense of
spontaneity, and our hero emerges as just as cold-blooded as his nemeses. For example, Bradley holds an arrogant British
gangster at gunpoint, and the gangster proposes they negotiate. Our grief-stricken hero refuses, and the
gangster’s head vanishes in a bloody explosion. This could rate as the darkest
movie that Lou Ferrigno has ever toplined, and he delivers a solemn performance
as John Bradley. Paiaya produced the
straightforward but violent “Instant Death” on the streets of London for added
authenticity. He does a good job of establishing both the characters of Bradley
and Razor before he turns them loose on each other. Part of the fun of watching “Instant Death”
is that you can savor what the hero will do to his foes. Mind you, you won’t find any gratuitous
nudity in the unrated DVD version of “Instant Death,” because it emphasizes blood,
gore, and guys. The homicidal content and the casual depiction of murder and rape
may appall the squeamish but appeal simultaneously to stout-hearted action
junkie fans who can tolerate a little blood and gore. One of the chief virtues
of “Instant Death” is British director Ara Paiaya doesn’t let his efficient 84-minute
melodrama wear out its welcome.
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