अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंEx-C.I.A. Agent Tom Burton (Rutger Hauer) goes to Morocco with businesswoman Christine Sanders (Carol Alt) to rescue her son, the kidnapped heir to a desert fortune.Ex-C.I.A. Agent Tom Burton (Rutger Hauer) goes to Morocco with businesswoman Christine Sanders (Carol Alt) to rescue her son, the kidnapped heir to a desert fortune.Ex-C.I.A. Agent Tom Burton (Rutger Hauer) goes to Morocco with businesswoman Christine Sanders (Carol Alt) to rescue her son, the kidnapped heir to a desert fortune.
Stewart Bick
- Daniel
- (as Stewart Jan Bick)
Christopher Ahrens
- Benson
- (as Cristopher Ahrens)
David L. Thompson
- Holy Man
- (as David Thompson)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
A rich, bossy executive's son is kidnapped by her ex-husband, an arab who has been warned to return to his people or face the consequences, which could include her death. When he and the boy arrive at the settlement of his father, the Emir (Omar Sharif), he is informed that, because he has been a bad boy who transgressed against his society's precepts, he will be bypassed and his son, now thirteen, will eventually rule the Emir's people. Meanwhile, the frantic mother (Carol Alt, looking quite elegant) has been put in touch with a specialist in "dirty" operations (Rutger Hauer), who agrees, for a price, to rescue the boy from the Emir's clutches. At this point, the movie begins to slow down as Hauer and his associates penetrate the Emir's lair. There's a lack of imagination and flair to the filming. They just crunch it out. One gets tired of seeing people diving off camels or rolling down sand dunes after they get shot. The film score sounds as if it were written for some other, equally pedestrian movie. And just when you think everything is about to be tied up in a neat package, there's a twenty-minute coda of more gunplay. When you run out of dialogue or plot twists, get out those AK-47s. Does the father pay for his "crime"? Does the kid get saved? Does the Emir say "It is written....?" Does Hauer end up with Alt? Have you ever seen a movie?
If you are a big fan of Rutger Hauer you might even *enjoy* this movie, otherwise, don't spend your time on this one. The music is awful and so are the action scenes, if you want to see Rutger's action film i recommend seeing rather split second or arctic blue.
Other than the enjoyment of looking at Carol Alt in her business suits, this is a pretty good cast wasted. To start with, I couldn't care less about her rich girl persona and her snot son. The kid looks like a refugee from Leave It to Beaver. He is so happy all the time. Even when he punches out the big kid in the principals office. Rutger Hauer is hired to go retrieve the boy from his Arab father who is an aspiring Emir in a desert colony. Boy, it's hard to watch what the likes of Omar Sharif became. Anyway, they blast their way in and attempt the rescue. She comes along, of course, because she is an Alpha female, rich, corporate executive, which qualifies her to fight against Arabs with machine guns. Mostly she hides; but she is there. I'm sure a fair amount of money was spent on this. There is some nice desert cinematography. It's just too many deaths, done easily, to get back that little jerk kid, who, in actuality, couldn't fight his way out of a grocery sack. Too much shooting and not enough plot.
This film is a lazy studio money grab. They took a five hour mini-series called Law of the Desert (AKA: Maktub) and chopped it down to around 90 minutes and released it as an action movie. The trouble is that the original mini-series was a whole lot more than an action movie. Hours of material were left on the cutting room floor including assassination attempts and the entire subplot involving Elliott Gould.
The editing is so sloppily done that some of the cuts will jar you. People disappear and reappear in inexplicable ways. And quite egregiously, Omar Sharif's character arc was largely removed from the ending.
On a positive note, many of the action sequences were largely left intact.
The editing is so sloppily done that some of the cuts will jar you. People disappear and reappear in inexplicable ways. And quite egregiously, Omar Sharif's character arc was largely removed from the ending.
On a positive note, many of the action sequences were largely left intact.
Christine Sanders (Carol Alt) is a wealthy divorced executive with the twelve-year-old son Robert Sanders (David Flosi) that studies in an expensive boarding school. When her ex-husband Moulay "Ray" Beni-Zair (Kabir Bedi) kidnaps Robert, he travels to Marocco where the boy is the heir of his father, the leader Emir Beni-Zair (Omar Sharif), and shall lead his tribe in the future. Christine hires the mercenary Tom Burton (Rutger Hauer) to travel to Marocco with her and bring her son back. Now, Tom and his small team have to find a way to rescue Robert, who is in a fortress of his grandfather in the desert.
"Beyond Justice" (1991) is a movie with a lame storyline and waste of a great cast. Regarding the plot, why the unnecessary scene of the obnoxious Robert Sanders at the boarding school? It is impossible to like this spoiled character that smiles in all the scenes and is awfully performed by unknown David Flosi. Christine Sanders' decision to go with Tom Burton to the desert is unreasonable and a stupid way to explore the gorgeous Carol Alt along the story. Elliott Gould gives only his name to the credits since his participation is basically three cameos. Ray's regret of abducting his spoiled son is also ridiculous. The plot with "two white men defeating dozens of evil armed Muslins in their territory" is silly and ridiculous. Four foreigners defeating Emir Beni-Zair's army inside his fortress is too much. The sacrifice of the guide to save the lives of Robert and his mute friend, who is forgotten in the end, is absurd. But the icing on the cake is the corny and awful romance of Christine and Tom Burton is a terrible ending! My vote is four.
Title (Brazil): "Além da Justiça" ("Beyond Justice")
"Beyond Justice" (1991) is a movie with a lame storyline and waste of a great cast. Regarding the plot, why the unnecessary scene of the obnoxious Robert Sanders at the boarding school? It is impossible to like this spoiled character that smiles in all the scenes and is awfully performed by unknown David Flosi. Christine Sanders' decision to go with Tom Burton to the desert is unreasonable and a stupid way to explore the gorgeous Carol Alt along the story. Elliott Gould gives only his name to the credits since his participation is basically three cameos. Ray's regret of abducting his spoiled son is also ridiculous. The plot with "two white men defeating dozens of evil armed Muslins in their territory" is silly and ridiculous. Four foreigners defeating Emir Beni-Zair's army inside his fortress is too much. The sacrifice of the guide to save the lives of Robert and his mute friend, who is forgotten in the end, is absurd. But the icing on the cake is the corny and awful romance of Christine and Tom Burton is a terrible ending! My vote is four.
Title (Brazil): "Além da Justiça" ("Beyond Justice")
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाAfter the movie's release it became public domain on various VHS and DVD transfers.
- गूफ़The Stinger missile sold to the emir is very obvious a cheaply made replica.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThis is the edited 113 minute theatrical version of the 5-hour mini-series Il (1989) Principe del deserto'.
- कनेक्शनEdited from Il principe del deserto (1991)
- साउंडट्रैकUnione Musicisti Di Rona
Performed by the orchestra
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Beyond Justice?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 53 मि(113 min)
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.33 : 1
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