Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueVietnam vet suffers brain damage, he and buddy open bar. Gangsters pressure them into brutal cage fights, which they resist, leading to conflict. Brain-damaged vet's childlike mentality juxt... Tout lireVietnam vet suffers brain damage, he and buddy open bar. Gangsters pressure them into brutal cage fights, which they resist, leading to conflict. Brain-damaged vet's childlike mentality juxtaposed with violent situations.Vietnam vet suffers brain damage, he and buddy open bar. Gangsters pressure them into brutal cage fights, which they resist, leading to conflict. Brain-damaged vet's childlike mentality juxtaposed with violent situations.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Cowboy
- (as Ketrick Kit Kelley)
Avis à la une
The cage fights, occurring within an illegal underground club run by the Asian mafia known as Tongs, serves as a sporadic glimpse into what's to come while most of the film deals with two Vietnam Vets, Reb Brown as Scott and Lou Ferrigno as Billy, both shown in a Vietnam era prologue...
Billy saves Scott's life by grasping his hand in an ascending helicopter to keep him from falling - after being shot in the head. The loss of blood causes brain damage...
Cut fifteen years later, after a corny opening credit montage guided by music a lame song too weak for the upcoming testosterone-driven action... The reality is, Scott owns a bar and takes care of Billy like a mildly retarded son.
Although, the characters that really drive the film's plot are two shifty but likable Italian thugs played by Michael Dante and Mike Moroff who, cornered by an impending debt, stir up the pot in several ways, eventually tricking Ferrigo's gentle giant Billy to partake in cage fighting...
Both serving as not only plot catalysts but comic relief, going back and forth as if annoyed siblings...
Eventually, about an hour in, an enraged Scott seeks Billy, wielding a shotgun like only Reb Brown can, hunting down a gang the Italians used as a patsy...
And Brown has never been better, showing intensity in place of his usual macho cool while Ferrigno nails the role as a friendly man-child who, when pushed too far, all but turns green in that cage: where only the winner survives...
Meanwhile James Shigeta makes a terrific head villain, running the illegal bouts with an iron fist, shifting rules as they go as the always dependable character-actor Al Ruscio, as an Italian mobster, adds his own weight to elevate the already topnotch, underrated vehicle that is CAGE, starring two muscular studs held-up by the strength of top-notch surrounding performers.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen cast, Lou Ferrigno did extensive research on underground cage match-style fighting, soldier life after injuries, and PTSD, but Reb Brown did not.
- GaffesAt the end of the movie, after all the bad guys have been killed, Tiger Joe picks up a case of money and gives it to Scott and Billy so that they can rebuild their bar. In reality, that case of money would have to be submitted as evidence, and Tiger Joe, Scott and Billy could be prosecuted for stealing evidence.
- Citations
Billy Thomas: I'm smart, too. I got three-seventy-five... and five-forty on the Master-Blaster.
Mario: [awestruck] Jeez.
Tony Baccola: Wait. Master-Blaster? What is that?
Mario: Its a video game, Tony!
Tony Baccola: Yeah, I should've known you'd know!
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Cine-Masochist: CAGE (2010)
- Bandes originalesDon't Let Go
Performed by Jenifer Green
Written by Pamela Phillips Oland and Marilyn Berglas
Produced by Michael Wetherwax
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Cage?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 618 178 $US
- Montant brut mondial
- 618 178 $US