Aggiungi una trama nella tua lingua"The Lost Command, " a bunch of notorious renegades, terrorize South Vietnam, forcing Sgt. Zack Skinner, HQ's best man to hunt down the Command to stop its killing spree."The Lost Command, " a bunch of notorious renegades, terrorize South Vietnam, forcing Sgt. Zack Skinner, HQ's best man to hunt down the Command to stop its killing spree."The Lost Command, " a bunch of notorious renegades, terrorize South Vietnam, forcing Sgt. Zack Skinner, HQ's best man to hunt down the Command to stop its killing spree.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Sgt. Rick Stratton
- (as Brett Clark)
- Soldier
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Never has it been more obvious that Santiago was just shooting this to make a quick buck – he doesn't appear to be interested at all in the plot, characters or dialogue, so all three are by-the-numbers. There's absolutely nobody in the film to care about, as the heroes are all selfish meat heads and the sole female an annoyingly brassy photographer who thinks nothing of putting others in danger. Brett Clark stars as the one-dimensional hero, and while he knows how to fire a gun, he doesn't appear to have grasped the essentials of acting – sometimes his dialogue is so mumbled that I'm surprised Santiago didn't ask for another take. The film's sole well-known person is Robert Patrick, aka the Liquid Metal Man from TERMINATOR 2; man, what a break that must have been after appearing in obscure Filipino action films like this! Sadly Patrick doesn't get a chance to make an impression in the film, as other than a couple of angry outbursts, his screen time is limited to running around shooting and being tied up.
Other cast members are familiar if you're weird enough to have watched many Filipino exploitation movies. William Steis from the same director's DEMON OF PARADISE is here, as is old Mike Monty, a red-haired older guy who always played a Colonel-type in these types of films. Also popping up in a cameo appearance is none other than Vic Diaz, big, bald and as villainous as ever.
The cheapness of the production is even more apparent than is usual for the director. When our intrepid trio are called on to ambush a train, the budget doesn't even stretched to a normal one – instead we get a dinky little model train, those ones that are little more than head height. Hmph – I'll even take a CGI train over the model train seen here any day. Still, there's room in the budget for a helicopter and lots and lots of explosions, as well as flying stuntmen and a special effects technician with a propensity for people being shot in the head. Sadly, the action isn't varied or particularly stylised, so it all gets very routine and monotonous very quickly – some martial arts bouts amid the flying bullets would have livened things up a little. Incredibly – or perhaps not surprisingly considering the leeching nature of Filipino film productions – this spawned not one but two sequels!
Cirio H. Santiago's "Eye of the Eagle" is a low-octane (and low interest) war picture from the prolific Filipino helmer, who has been in Roger Corman's stable off and on for the past 15 years. His 1972 effort "Savage" was a lot more fun in the same vein.
Newie, shot in 1986, relies upon a tasteless plot device, postulating that various renegade G. I.s in Vietnam, listed as POWs and MIAs, actually are making up a "lost command" unit carrying out massacres and unauthorized missions. Cec Verrell portrays a pretty newshen on the track of this expose story, joined reluctantly by Sergeant Stratton (beefy Brett Clark) after latter conducts various minor league missions of his own.
Upshot is that the renegades are led by Sergeant Rattner (Ed Crick), who killed Stratton's brother years before. Climax is the expected one-on-one battle between the two soldiers.
Pic consists mainly of mindless machine gun battles, in which shooting and explosions are boring and out of context. Use of Filipino actors as the Vietnamese is utterly unconvincing, especially when the heinous North Vietnamese colonel is played by Vic Diaz, mainstay of dozens of Filipino action pics of the '60s and '70s. Lead player Clark is stiff and given to monotone line readings, while Verrell, a Santiago discovery who had a distinctive, butch persona in the director's previous film "Silk", is here just another Kate Capshaw clone.
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- Citazioni
Sgt. Rich Stratton: What's turned you into a fucking animal?
Sgt. Bo Rattner: Well, you got to be an animal to survive in this pit.
Sgt. Rich Stratton: Yeah, but right now it's just you and me in this pit
[Throws knife at Rattner's neck]
- ConnessioniFeatured in Kain's Quest: Rambo: First Blood Part II (2018)
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- Jungle Force
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Corregidor Island, Manila Bay, Filippine(Last battle against the lost command)
- Azienda produttrice
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