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Street Fighter
1994
101 minutes
PG-13
Released over Christmas weekend to lousy reviews and break-even box office, the Jean Claude Van Damme vehicle has a certain infamy as it featured the last film work of critical darling Raul Julia. He took the role as lead villain M. Bison as a favor to his kids. Little did he know that he would die of a sudden stroke two months before the release date. He apparently was wheeled into the ambulance clutching the script for Robert Rodriguez's Desperado.
However tragic that it may be that a great actor's last work should be a lead role in a big budget video game movie, one must acknowledge that Julia looks like he's having a blast during the entire film. And frankly, he's still the best reason to sit through this colorful, campy, guilty pleasure. Decked out in a red military jumpsuit with a long, flowing red cape, M. Bison proves that if you're going to have a villain say something like "Why do they still call me a warlord? And mad? All I want to do is to create the perfect genetic soldier. Not for power, not for evil, but for good," then he sure as hell better be wearing a cape.
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"Behold, the face of your destruction, and of my victory!"
"What's the matter? You come to fight a madman, and instead find a god?"
"You do not deserve the martial dignity of a firing squad! No! You shall be killed by a wild beast, a beast BORN of my own genius! Raise the incubation chamber!"
It doesn't hurt that M. Bison is actually a menacing bastard, as he opens the film by snapping the necks of two of his hostages. You watch his performance, almost on edge, wondering what daffy, bat shit thing he's going to say next. One of my favorite bits comes at the end, right as Colonel Guile (Jean Claude Van Damme) and M. Bison face off for their final duel. Guile rips off his jacket and exclaims: "Are you man enough to face me?" M. Bison replies "Anyone who opposes me will be destroyed!" Uh... right. Now, to be fair, those are the lines that the respective characters say when you select them in the original game, but what's shocking is how not out of place Bison's inexplicable response is in the context of Julia's performance.
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With the exception of Julia, Wes Studi (as crime boss Sagot), and Roshan Seth (as conflicted Dr. Dahlism), every other performance stinks to high heaven. Stilted line readings, awkward inflection, etc... you know you're in trouble when Jean Claude Vane Damme is arguably the fourth best actor in the film. But the film does amazingly find a place for all sixteen Street Fighter characters, and only a few (T Hawk, Captain Sawada - a rejiggered version of Fei Long) are mere cameos. The action is perfunctory and at no point does anyone, I dunno, fight on a street, for money. By the climax, the film has morphed into a live action GI Joe film (M. Bison's henchmen even look like Cobra soldiers) and I defy you not the hum the GI Joe theme song as Guile's boat makes its way to Bison's fortress (yelling 'Yo Joe!' and 'Cobra!' at appropriate moments in optional).
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Yes, by any rational standard, Street Fighter is a pretty lousy movie. But the sheer campy buzz, the cheerful exuberance (as opposed to the new film, which is allegedly dark, dour, and glum), combined with Raul Julia's possibly brilliant performance, makes this one worth a glance.
3 comments:
Scott, your willingness to review even films like this (which I do have an interest in), as well as spend time to really dissect films like Taken is a reason why your one of my favorite writers to read.
Not only a film lover, but clearly a gamer....come on scott...you can tell us!
I was a big Nintendo/arcade junkie in the late 80s/early 90s. Not so much anymore, but how I miss the arcades of yesteryear.
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