Remo
Williams: The Adventure Begins (1985)
Dir. by Guy
Hamilton
Starring
Fred Ward, Wilford Brimley, Joel Grey and Kate Mulgrew
Plot:
A New York
cop is recruited against his will for the secret spy organization CURE. His death having been faked, he is given the
new identity of “Remo Williams,” and is sent to train with a Korean martial
arts expert so that he can become an assassin for the government. However, his training is cut short when the
schemes of a corrupt arms manufacturer threaten to reveal CURE's existence.
Nostalgia
This is
another of the movies (we had a good hundred or so) that my parents had taped
off of TV sometime in the late 80s/early 90s.
I remember watching it many times, and enjoying the action and the
humorous character of Chiun. It was
unavailable on DVD for forever, so I probably hadn’t seen it in at least a
decade, though I know we had that VHS tape up until we got rid of our VHS
collection in the late 2000s.
Rewatch
Remo
Williams really wants to be an American James Bond movie. It was directed by Guy Hamilton, who’d helmed
four of the Bond films (including Goldfinger), and was based
on a popular series of pulp spy novels, much like Ian Fleming’s. It features fistfights, shootouts, martial
arts, infiltrations into secure facilities, and other Bond-like
shenanigans. It also features some of
the casual sexism and racism that were hallmarks of the 60s and 70s Bond films
(more on both of these later). However,
despite all of this, it doesn’t quite come together as the exciting adventure
film that it clearly was trying to be.
For the most
part, I’m going to have to fault Hamilton.
The film is shot and edited like the early 70s Bond films that he’d
worked on previously, and it’s clearly behind the times. This movie came out four years after Raiders of the Lost Ark and only two years before
Lethal Weapon, and yet its style seems antiquated compared
to both of those movies. Fred Ward,
though a good actor (I still love him in Tremors, which we'll get to eventually), can’t
quite pull off the action scenes convincingly.
It probably doesn’t help matters that he looks a lot like my childhood Tae
Kwon Do instructor, former professional kickboxer Kerry Roop, and clearly can’t
do moves like he could. And most of the
big set pieces, with one exception, end rather anti-climactically.
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Not quite Sean Connery |
That
exception is the one really good sequence from the movie, the fight between
Williams and a trio of construction workers on the Statue of Liberty. During the mid-80s, the statue underwent a
two-year restoration project, and was covered with scaffolding. While nowhere near the level of, say, Jackie
Chan, this scaffolding was effectively used for a precarious fight in and
around the statue. However, even this
scene is undercut slightly by having his opponents be a bunch of blue collar
guys who’d been paid off to stage an “accident”, and who clearly have no combat
background. If the movie wants us to
take Williams seriously as an assassin, it needs to give us credible threats
against him.
The movie
also isn’t quite sure what to do with its Bond Girl, an Army officer played by
a very young Kate Mulgrew of Voyager fame. First, she’s only in the movie for maybe
twenty minutes tops, disappearing for almost an hour after she’s first
introduced. Second, it can’t decide what
sort of character it wants her to be.
Her first two scenes have her verbally shooting down two male officers
who are sexist and condescending to her with remarkable speed and wit. Later, however, she blunders right into an
obvious trap, only surviving because of Williams’s intervention, and ends up
tagging along with him for the rest of the movie without providing much in the
way of value besides commenting on his and his mentor’s shared sexism towards
her.
Speaking of
his mentor, why do I keep picking movies with extremely glaring
whitewashing? Once again we have a white
actor playing an Asian character in yellowface.
At least this time it’s the Oscar-winning actor Joel Grey instead of an
acting newbie (though you could also argue that he should have known better). His character of Chiun is a walking bundle of
Asian martial artist clichés, down to the terrible accent and fortune-cookie
wisdom – something that Williams even calls him out on in a rare moment of
lampshade hanging for the film. Granted,
it IS fun watching the arrogant, openly racist Williams get his ass handed to
him in their first meeting, and then repeatedly throughout their training. I also can’t tell how much of their
interactions are meant to be serious teachings, and how much of it is simply
Chiun trolling his trainee (something that he openly and admittedly engages in
at numerous times over the course of the movie). Grey was actually nominated for a Golden
Globe for his performance, something that I have to chalk up to afterglow from
the previous year’s Globe and Oscar nominations for Pat Morita in his similar
role as Mr. Miyagi.
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Seriously, Hollywood, stop doing this! |
Now, all of
that being said, I think that the core idea of this movie does have something
there. If done better, it probably could
have ended up as something similar to the first Kingsman movie, which made my Top 10 when it came out a couple of years ago. There’s supposed to be a Shane Black-helmed
reboot in the works, and I would love to see someone like Donnie Yen take on
the role of Chiun. Until then, however,
I don’t really feel the need to revisit this one again.
Nostalgia: A-
Rewatch: C-
Stray
thoughts
-While the
scenes surrounding them weren’t all that great, there were two moments from the
setpieces that I’d like to single out.
First, the incredulous reaction that Williams has when the guard dogs
chasing him during his break-in at Grove Industries team up to lower a metal
fire escape so they can continue following him.
-Second, the
only moment that really felt like the inventiveness of the Bond franchise, when
he escapes from a trap in a military gasmask-testing chamber by using the
henchman’s diamond tooth stud as a glass cutter to break the bullet-proof
observation window.
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