Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Rambu, The Intruder [1986]

As another entry into our canon of Indonesian rip-offs, we have The Intruder also known as Rambu. I'm not going to get into the specifics of the plot, mainly because the plot is specifically difficult to follow but trust me when I say its a pretty good one.

Rambu is a guy who didn't finish the police academy and so he mostly goes around beating up bad guys for fun while his girlfriend financially supports him. Then she gets killed (and raped; it's an Indonesian film after all) by some guys Rambu beat up. He quickly ends up in a new romance and she gets kidnapped and he saves her. Throughout the film there is this expectation that Rambu is supposed to get a job with a man called Mr. Andre. We have no idea what he does but it's unsurprising that he is in cohoots with the bad guy drug dealer, Mr. White. The film is set up basically for Rambu to get into fights with guys. 

This movie is pretty solid even though it's incomprehensible. There are a lot of completely random lines, acted poorly, some fighting with a bouncy ball, and overall basically nothing having to do with the Rambo movies it borrows from. Even the more common title, The Intruder, is confusing. Is Rambu the intruder as a white guy in a Pacific island nation? Is Mr. White the bad guy for the same reason but with crime? Who knows? Either way, its worth a watch.

Spoon Rating: 6

Monday, December 20, 2021

New York Ninja [2021; 1984]

In an effort to boost morale, we have had two weeks of solid choices. Last week Kay was not in attendance so there was a rewatch of Neil Breen's Pass Thru. This week is a new one for us and a recently discovered classic overall that has been gaining popularity in bad movie circles. The story behind this film's two release dates is pretty unique. The reels for the film were found even though the film wasn't finished and didn't have any sound. Luckily, the reel told a coherent story and most of the scenes show the actors clearly enough that dubbing wasn't actually difficult so a full film was pieced together in 2021. Initially we were a bit skeptical about how the voice acting might ham up the performances, but they honestly didn't go any further than the actors were already going. The movie also has an amazing surreal vibe to it because it was put together so recently. The film has insanely high definition for something so clearly shot in the 80s, and the music added, while definitely time period appropriate, still put Adam and Kay in the mindset of the soundtrack to Drive and instantly endeared all of us to it even though none of us are specific fans of the 80s.

So what's the plot of this new discovery? The film starts in a pretty standard martial arts film way. The main character (played by the director and writer; another sign of quality) finds out his wife is pregnant and she's immediately killed. In this version of New York, there is a problem with gangs kidnapping women and those gangs get their style tips from Mad Max side characters and A Clockwork Orange (jockstraps). We are briefly introduced to the leader of this crime ring, a man who wears steampunk welder sunglasses and makes excellent facial expressions. The main character decides to get revenge by dressing like a ninja in a pale yellow robe, and occasionally roller skates, and beating up bad guys. At one point he saves a child and adopts him. This is most of the first half of the film with this one notably bizarre scene where Sunglasses opens up a glowing box that seemingly melts his face and hands but he's into it. 

After a "Several Weeks Later" screen, we learn that this man has now been given the name The Plutonium Killer and he apparently can't look into the sun and maybe he needs that radiation to live or something? It's unclear both how he got this way and how his thing works at all. Our main character's character of the New York Ninja has since become a real sensation and people have t-shirts saying "I Love NY Ninja" on them. He can also now defy physics when he fights. Soon a detective lady is kidnapped by the gangs and our main character is on the case. He finds the lair where all the women are being kept and frees them. For reference, we never really learn what the kidnapping was for. We can assume sex slavery or something but we are never told. Ninja has a ridiculous fight with The Killer's driver, a man who somewhat resembles Elijah Wood with a rattail and black tie attire. Then the Killer does some sort of ritual(?) where he is able to take the face of this cameraman he captured to try to convince a reporter to go with him. Either way, he kidnaps the reporter and just drags her around with the Ninja chasing them until the end where the Ninja is able to save the day. Ninja is in the process of getting arrested when a bunch of child fans swarm him and he is able to escape. The film ends with the Ninja hugging the detective lady and breaking the hell out of the fourth wall with a wink and a point.

This film is wild. It's cliché is so many ways, but then it's completely off the wall in others. While the plot mostly makes sense, there are little details that throw you for a loop and are never explained, especially about our main villain. The face acting is over-the-top, the weapons are Party City, and honestly, we can all be grateful this film was saved. Disappointingly, while John Liu, our original director and lead actor, seems to still be alive at 77, I can't seem to find anything about his thoughts on the film. I'd like to think he'd feel his vision was maintained.

Spoon Rating: 8.5

Monday, December 6, 2021

Warp Speed [1981]

After the rather boring film last week, this movie kind of felt like a bit of relief. Was it amazing? No. In fact, the first 20 minutes or so were kind of boring and a bit hard to follow. But once we got into the rhythm of the film a bit more and some of the crazy really started to come out, we ultimately walked away from it with pretty favorable feelings.

The plot is a story within a story. In the outer frame, a psychic has been brought onto an abandoned ship that was supposed to go to Saturn to investigate the disappearance of the crew. The story of the crew is told through a series of flashbacks that are unchronological at first but eventually move back so we can see the plot unfold. The crew consists of Adam West as the captain, a lieutenant who's maybe dating the blonde bimbo but definitely an asshole, said bimbo, the reasonable black lady, the also reasonable but maybe a bit suicidal engineer, the psychiatrist, and the medical doctor who says everything antagonistically and has daddy issues. Everything starts out chill with a lot of card playing, failed flirting, and trips to a simulation machine called the pleasure center. The problem arises when there's an explosion outside and the math proves that they will need to lighten the load just to get home. After stripping the ship, they realize that people need to go too, which is kind of fine since everyone's going nuts. Asshole rapes doctor after she stupidly wagers sex during a poker game, the captain initially considers just going on with the mission even though everyone will surely die and mutiny almost happens, and everyone is mad or sad all the time. First the psychiatrist draws the short straw and when he resists his fate of death, asshole breaks his neck. Then the doctor tries to throw the black lady under the bus and they decide to go after her instead. The doctor slits her own throat in a delusion. The engineer sacrifices himself. The asshole shoots the captain and the black lady and promises the bimbo they will go out together but just kills her instead. At this point we have an absolutely wild turn where asshole acknowledges the psychic who he can apparently see even though they are in different timelines and goes to stab her before the movie cuts out. We literally screamed in frustration.

While completely poorly written from a logic perspective, this movie definitely had a plot to follow which was really appreciated after last week. The acting was often funny and the comedy was heightened by the fact that scenes were intercut with EKGs that Sarah kept assessing as either, "normal" or "dead" when the film was trying to tell us otherwise. Then, of course, there was the lazy first-semester-of-film-school choices like the ending. All in all, not too shabby.

Spoon Rating: 5