Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA martial artist lawyer is framed for a crime, dismissed, and left penniless. To survive, he enters an underground fighting circuit.A martial artist lawyer is framed for a crime, dismissed, and left penniless. To survive, he enters an underground fighting circuit.A martial artist lawyer is framed for a crime, dismissed, and left penniless. To survive, he enters an underground fighting circuit.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Alessandro Bandiera
- Tommy Vega
- (as Alex Bandiera)
Recensioni in evidenza
A street wise lawyer deep in debt is forced to repay by participating in illegal martial arts fights. Jeff Wincott exhibits his martial arts skill throughout the entire movie. The story is decent, but being in the martial arts myself, I thought this aspect really delivered.
As the credits for "Law Of The Jungle" started to display, my expectations sank greatly. First, the credits identified the producer of the movie as Ashok Amritraj, a producer who has produced an unbelievable amount of shoddy schlock. Then the director credit came up, identifying the director as Damian Lee, who has directed a lot of really bad movies. But the credits also revealed that star Jeff Wincott was one of the producers. Maybe, I thought, he would bring to this movie what he had learned in his American movies. (This movie is Canadian)
It didn't take very long to realize that this was turning up to be a very bad movie. In fairness to Wincott and Lee, they were working with a really terrible script. (Oh, wait - no fairness to Lee, since I just remembered that he wrote the script for this movie.) It takes about half an hour for the movie to develop something of a plot, and it's very slow-going afterwards. The movie is stuffed with talk talk talk - and not interesting talk.
What about the fight sequences? Well, I'm pretty sure martial arts fans will be greatly disappointed. Lee screws up these scenes like he does with the other parts of the movies. He does make Wincott get hit with a lot more blows than you usually expect the protagonist to get in a movie like this, but other than that interesting aspect, the fights are horribly done. Lee incompetently uses techniques like slow motion, bad camera angles, and very one-sided fights for the most part.
A message for Wincott: Make regular trips to your barber. The long hair look you have in this movie makes you look ridiculous.
It didn't take very long to realize that this was turning up to be a very bad movie. In fairness to Wincott and Lee, they were working with a really terrible script. (Oh, wait - no fairness to Lee, since I just remembered that he wrote the script for this movie.) It takes about half an hour for the movie to develop something of a plot, and it's very slow-going afterwards. The movie is stuffed with talk talk talk - and not interesting talk.
What about the fight sequences? Well, I'm pretty sure martial arts fans will be greatly disappointed. Lee screws up these scenes like he does with the other parts of the movies. He does make Wincott get hit with a lot more blows than you usually expect the protagonist to get in a movie like this, but other than that interesting aspect, the fights are horribly done. Lee incompetently uses techniques like slow motion, bad camera angles, and very one-sided fights for the most part.
A message for Wincott: Make regular trips to your barber. The long hair look you have in this movie makes you look ridiculous.
'Street Law' is interesting if you're a fan of Jeff Wincott. It has some cliches typical of dtv fare - underground fight tournament, big bad villain, revenge plot - but it isn't horrible. You do have to buy-in to the fact that a long haired muscled martial artist with fighting experience also doubles as a successful lawyer though.
John Ryan (Wincott) has gone into hock with a loan shark to the tune of 78k on behalf of some of his poor clients. Enter Luis Calderone (Paco Christian Priesto) as his childhood friend who went to prison after an incident involving both of them. He's built himself up to be a formidable gangster who buys out Ryan's debt, bribes key people, implicates him in a murder in a bid to own him. John is told all he has to do is win some underground fights he runs and he'll be free. Of course, all Luis wants is sweet revenge.
What's holding it back is some poor choices. There's a "capture the flag" element here to the fight scenes that adds nothing. Also a dreadful use of slow-mo, camera work that doesn't even capture blows landing. Plus after the build up between main characters (all Luis wants is sweet revenge) the finale is a letdown. Most of the supporting cast don't standout either.
'Street Law' doesn't look horrible, but you've seen the sum of it's parts done better elsewhere. Priesto made for a decent bad guy and fans of Jeff Wincott will find bits to like here, but this isn't the best flick he's done or even a decent dtv trip on it's own. It's also the second team-up Wincott made with director Damian Lee and of course filmed in Toronto.
John Ryan (Wincott) has gone into hock with a loan shark to the tune of 78k on behalf of some of his poor clients. Enter Luis Calderone (Paco Christian Priesto) as his childhood friend who went to prison after an incident involving both of them. He's built himself up to be a formidable gangster who buys out Ryan's debt, bribes key people, implicates him in a murder in a bid to own him. John is told all he has to do is win some underground fights he runs and he'll be free. Of course, all Luis wants is sweet revenge.
What's holding it back is some poor choices. There's a "capture the flag" element here to the fight scenes that adds nothing. Also a dreadful use of slow-mo, camera work that doesn't even capture blows landing. Plus after the build up between main characters (all Luis wants is sweet revenge) the finale is a letdown. Most of the supporting cast don't standout either.
'Street Law' doesn't look horrible, but you've seen the sum of it's parts done better elsewhere. Priesto made for a decent bad guy and fans of Jeff Wincott will find bits to like here, but this isn't the best flick he's done or even a decent dtv trip on it's own. It's also the second team-up Wincott made with director Damian Lee and of course filmed in Toronto.
Jeff Wincott, who was making martial arts flicks at the same time as Jeff Speakman, plays a long-haired lawyer who loses everything -- not entirely his fault, it seems -- and is forced to fight in a series of illegal matches. That part of the plot you've seen before, but the rest of this action flick is a tad unusual. I won't say more about the plot, but I will tell you that the film has some exciting fights, and the ending ties neatly in with the rather odd opening. Wincott is pretty convincing as an ass-kicking lawyer. He is the brother of Michael Wincott, by the way. Worth a look for fans of both action and kung fu type flicks.
just watching this on late night FREE TV.
bad acting, story, hairstyling, casting choreography, directing,,, can't even be bothered finishing the list.
i love bad TV. i laugh at lame 1 liners and cheap sets. but this is just plain bad.
i think the makers were going for a jean-claude/Dolph lundren type movie, but even they probably would have turned down the role.
the only thing i like is the supposed tough 'mafia' guys who would make anybody they threaten laugh in their face.
do not waste your money on this and if you are looking for cheap laughs you will be waiting a while.
bad acting, story, hairstyling, casting choreography, directing,,, can't even be bothered finishing the list.
i love bad TV. i laugh at lame 1 liners and cheap sets. but this is just plain bad.
i think the makers were going for a jean-claude/Dolph lundren type movie, but even they probably would have turned down the role.
the only thing i like is the supposed tough 'mafia' guys who would make anybody they threaten laugh in their face.
do not waste your money on this and if you are looking for cheap laughs you will be waiting a while.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizChristina Cox used a body double for her nude scene.
- BlooperSome thugs knock down the door during a nude love scene, and in the next shot the couple are already in their underwear.
- Versioni alternativeGerman VHS and TV versions were heavily edited for violence to secure a FSK-18 rating. Only in 2024 was the uncut version released in Germany with a FSK-16 rating.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 226: Bruno (2009)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 38min(98 min)
- Mix di suoni
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