It definitely felt like a busier week for me. Going out to see fireworks, that is definitely busy work.
Please pardon my lack of patriotism. Forgive me for watching fireworks 
with my English Football tattoos exposed due to my Marty Scurll and Zack
 Zabre Jr. tank top. But listen to me about how The American Revolution 
was nothing more than a ploy to serve the rich. I do not know if I can 
flush that one out into a great piece of satire at this point, so that 
indoctrination will be for another time.
Regardless, God Save the Queen and Fuck the Video Assisted Referee (any good ref could have seen the offsides and the penalty).
On the topic of great foreign things that have fallen on hard time (I 
cannot wait for the Prince Charles take on "JVCD"), Jean-Claude Van 
Damme was one of those. As an action star, not an actor of course. If 
you have a writer as wise as David S. Goyer who knows how to justify an 
Los Angeles cop with an accent, you are in for some good stuff. If only I
 had those details before I accidentally came across the ridiculous 
finale of "Death Warrant" on cable.
10 years later, as someone who appreciates the Zack Snyder's DC trilogy,
 I can revel in the ridiculous premises that Goyer lays out. If only 
"Superman" had Van Damme's personality, I think everyone would agree 
with me that "Dawn of Justice" and "Death Warrant" can only be regarded 
as classics.
After single-handedly avenging his fallen partner, Quebec-transplant 
Louis Burke is the buzz of the L.A.P.D.'s homicide division. Being able 
to defeat the psychotic giant known as the Sandman, the governor and 
attorney general believe he can handle an undercover assignment in a 
state prison. He is a Quebecer. How would any inmates know who he was? 
This makes him the ideal person to determine who and why the new 
straight-laced inmates keep getting murdered. Or does this make him the 
ideal target.
The guards are in on this game and the governor may be as well. With 
Burke only being able to trust Amanda, his liaison, and Tisdale, his 
adolescent hacker pal, he will need to stick his neck out and ally 
himself with the wisest and most ambitious inmates to take down this 
conspiracy. All while praying that no seemingly invincible cons who he 
had busted get transferred to this clink.
"Death Warrant" might be the last great crazy script from the 80's era 
of action. Eventual TV great, Deran Sarafian's direction is the only 
thing that hinders the film. Well, that and most of Van Damme's costars 
acting down to his level.  Acting to the lead's capabilities is great 
when it is Keanu Reeve in a "John Wick" film, and you are portraying a 
criminal mastermind. Doing so as a somewhat ordinary person against a 
Belgian martial artist is comical.
But with all the stuff Goyer throws into his script, comical is not 
necessarily bad. It is like "Commando" with a lead who has more to say 
than just one liners. That either means we have a better story than the 
Schwarzenegger vehicle or far too low of a body count. Whatever you 
think, both are ridiculous, and that is what you want from 80's action, 
provided the effects are up to par, which they are.
To further get your attention, you get great supporting characters, some
 of whom you are just glad to see. Like Joshua John Miller, the boy who 
played Homer from "Near Dark." It is just good to see he did not leave 
his talent behind.
Robert Guillaume is not as powerful as Morgan Freeman's Red, but he 
gives a wise performance that is wise in so many ways. Wise that knew 
what kind of movie he was in. Wise that he knew how to be a relatable 
every man to help guide us through this tale. This wisdom must have 
passed on to his role as the original Rafiki.
This feature also has the best villain in a Van Damme film next to 
"Bloodsports's" Chung Li. Patrick Kilpatrick as the Sandman is like have
 an actual speaking version of Li. He is huge and menacing and his 
dialogue makes about as much sense as Bolo Yeung's most iconic role. 
Fortunately, the creepiness gives him a supernatural nature that you buy
 in on. Not until JVCD faces Dolph Lundgren do we get such a 
satisfactory adversary, and I love "Lionheart."
If I am overlooking one flaw, it may be the trangender prisoners 
portrayal, but this was a prison movie from before we considered all 
rape to be bad. What I am saying is, it is from a time where we had no 
clue on how to be woke. Should we remake this flick (with Van Damme as 
the Guillame role), I am sure we would find performers who can make this
 work. Would they want to is a totally different question.
Transgender hooker, hormone-driven hackers, inflammable giants and 
Jean-Claude Van Damme make "Death Warrant" a spectacle not to be missed.
 It is good for noise and it must be great with a few drinks. The story 
is something to be awed by and I am surprised there has not been a new 
take on this.
It is "Bloodsport" meets "Batman vs Superman." Who would not want to see
 an hour and over done CGI removed from that? Feel free to use that for 
the "4K 30th Anniversary Edition of Death Warrant." And email me at russthebus07@gmail.com for a treatment of my Pro-Wrestling Zom-Com, "Main Event of the Dead" while you are at.
I mean, Orion/MGM did distribute "Mac and Me." Surely I can do better.
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