Review

  • "Force: Five" is a routine martial arts action film which should playoff well enough for the diehard fans of the genre. Less ambitious or interesting than ACR's previous Chuck Norris vehicles, it has little chance of expanding uon the narrow but steady commercial audience base for kung fu pics.

    Spare plot concerns a soldier of fortune Jerry Martin (Joe Lewis) who with five crack assistants sets out to rescue a brainwashed girl from the island fortress of religious cult leader Reverend RHee (Master Bond Soo Han), styled as a silly combo of Rev. Moon and Jim Jones.

    Action is straightforward with enough violent grunt and kick interludes to please the target crowd. Writer-director Robert Clouse has eight kung fu-oriented pics under his belt, but errs this time in the casting of non-actors in almost all key roles. Talent looks good in the fight scenes, but their inexperience makes dialog and dramatic footage dull and laughable. Fights are strictly one-sided (with heavies falling like ten pins) until the final reel contests with Rev. Rhee and his huge assistant Carl (Bob Schott). Tech credits are just adequate.

    My review was written in July 1981 after a Manhattan UES screening.