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  • gridoon27 July 2004
    The only thing "Force: Five" proves is that the chances of finding a good American martial-arts film are about as many as those of finding a good Hong Kong Western. Yes, the film stars real martial artists who obviously know their stuff, but keep in mind that:

    a) most of them can't act (Richard Norton is excepted)

    b) most of the time they're fighting useless morons who stand around like sitting ducks, waiting to be kicked.

    And how about the fact that the doors of the rooms where the "bad guys" keep their drugs-and-guns-for-sale and the dead bodies of their victims are unlocked and unguarded?

    Cheap and stupid. But the actors sure know how to kick high. (*1/2)
  • Broadly speaking, the plot is just about as standard as it gets for action flicks: a group upheld as antagonists, a person in their midst, a contingent of heroes that are tasked with the retrieval of that person. The leader of those heroes handpicks his friends for their particular skills, and - well, you don't want spoilers, but you've also seen this movie before. And that's okay! Sometimes a silly little nothing, that we can enjoy without actively engaging with, is exactly what one needs, and formula and familiarity fits neatly within that aim. And so we have 'Force: five' (the colon is very important), made by acclaimed filmmaker Robert Clouse ('China O'Brien!' Oh, and 'Enter the dragon.'), and starring martial artists, action heroes, & recognizable faces like Joe Lewis, Richard Norton, Benny Urquidez, and Bob Schott. Yes, it's a silly romp. It's also fun!

    Despite sober underpinnings in the plot and some unexpectedly strong violence, 'Force: five' doesn't take itself all that seriously. That's for the best, given the premise, and furthermore in light of some over the top sequences and acting (the introduction of Norton's character is a total blast for just these reasons, not even taking into account his blonde hair). The only significant surprise here is the diversity in the assembled team, for otherwise the feature is pretty much exactly what one might assume (including, for the record, outdated ableist or racist language, gratuitous nudity, and an underhanded "blonde joke"). Even at that, though, this is duly well made. The story and scene writing may be a little common, and mostly just a vehicle for the action, but they're quite suitable and written well such as they are (though some bits are better or worse than others), with light humor at times. Those stunts, fights, and otherwise action sequences look great and are choreographed well, and I would certainly expect no less from something Clouse is involved with. Sets and filming locations alike are pretty fantastic, as well as any effects that are employed.

    There's nothing super remarkable about facets like Clouse's direction, the hair and makeup work, or William Goldstein's music, but all these are fairly solid, too. Anyway, maybe all this assessment is a tad beyond the point. 'Force: five' only wants to have a good time, and it achieves that - with the caveat that anyone who isn't receptive to second-tier martial arts flicks won't find anything here to change their mind. It's reasonably well done, but no must-see by any means, and even those who are fans of such fare may find the end result unremarkable. Both the active intrigue and the action come and go, for example, and in a more general sense, there's just not anything major to stand out. Still, it's a sufficient diversion for a lazy day, and sometimes that's all a film needs to be. Don't go out of your way for this, but if you happen to come across it, there are far worse ways to spend 100 minutes of your time.
  • Make no mistake, this is an "Enter the Dragon" rip-off.(Yes, same director as well), if you don't believe me, watch them back to back.

    One thing that stands out is that Robert Clouse certainly knows how to direct fight action and that is the movie's highlight. One master shot following every kick and spin, unlike the convoluted and choppy modern day cuts catering to mask the actors lack of skill.

    I have to admit that I first saw this as a kid back in the 80's and it is still Sensei Benny and Richard Norton that come out on top as performers even with their minimal presence in the movie. Its easy to see why Sammo and Jackie worked with them several times.
  • This seemingly low-budget film is among my favorite martial-arts films of all time even though the plot is a shameless copy of "Enter the Dragon"----minus Dragon's production values. You have the leader of a cult on his own island leading hundreds of followers. At the island, the daughter of a senator is among the followers and Joe Lewis is recruited to get her out. To do that, he enlists the help of five colleagues.

    I think what makes this movie stand above most martial arts films is that you have a charismatic group of martial artists working as a team when they infiltrate the bad guy's island. Director Robert Clouse, who also directed Enter the Dragon, really played up the "team" factor and I think that's the element that makes the film work.

    The actors aren't anything extraordinary, but anyone looking for Brandos or Oliviers here deserve what they get. I was surprised this was only one of two movies Joe Lewis ever made. I certainly thought he had the look and personality to carry a few more martial-arts films, but hey.

    Richard Norton, who played Ezekial, went on to great success in the straight-to-video world. A charismatic performer, he made a few pretty entertaining martial arts films over the years, some with fellow martial-artist Cynthia Rothrock.

    My favorite of the team was Sonny Barnes, who plays the cheesily named "Lockjaw". Barnes never really did much else after this, except for a Michael Jackson & Paul McCartney music video, which is a shame because I really enjoyed him in this.

    You can tell the budget went to the famous martial-artists in its cast because the locales and everything else in the film looks cheap.

    Aside from Lewis and Norton, you also have Benny "The Jet" Urquidez in the cast, and Master Bong Soo Han, who played the villain. Some martial-arts fans will recognize Han as Billy Jack's partner in "Trial of Billy Jack" during the climatic fight scene.

    As for the fight scenes, many of them are really good. Clouse takes full advantage of the fact he has an A-Team of martial-artists as stars and shows off their skills many times throughout the film, (even though most of the time they are fighting what are obviously a bunch of wannabe extras). Some of the stunts work, others bomb, but in the end, I really liked the movie. I also really liked the catchy title theme by William Goldstein. Some of my buddies think it's cheesy as hell, but I get a kick out of it.

    I wonder if Quentin Tarantino had this film in mind when wrote dialogue for "Pulp Fiction". In that film, Uma Thurman's character, Mia, said she starred in a pilot called, "Fox Force Five".

    Anyway, this is enjoyable for fans of the genre. The team factor makes all the difference, and there seemed to be potential here for sequels since I really enjoyed watching the cast work together.
  • You can not expect HERE the kind of film that OPERATION DRAGON director gave us one decade earlier. Bob Clouse who, after Bruce Lee death, lost the main element who could have pulled his talent. ULTIMATE WARRIOR and THE PACK were excellent action packed films, but that's all. I prefered Rowdy Herrington's ROAD HOUSE - which could also have been made by Clouse too - than this though bearable junk, and agreeable time waster. But so lousy. It seemed to me that the billionaire's daughter scheme, spoiled child abducted refusing to be saved by her dad's goons - the heroes of the film - reminded me a little Dick Brook's THE PROFESSIONNALS.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is like an Ed Wood movie, as all the fights look like it was only 1 take. All the fights except 1 are all one sided to the stars. They just keep kicking ass and it gets boring real quick. Not 1 star got killed or hurt.

    On a positive note, the main bad guy henchman played by Bob Schott, has a most impressive physique. Very massive for the time. It would have been a much better movie if he beat up all 5 main stars.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Reverend Rhee (Han) is a cult leader who, along with his devoted disciples, is sequestered away on a remote island. When Senator Forrester (MacLean) wants to rescue his daughter from the cult, he calls in "The Best" - i.e., a team of five high-kickin' Martial Arts fighters comprised of Jim Martin (Lewis), Lockjaw (Barnes), Billy Ortega (Urquidez), Laurie (Huntington), and Ezekiel (Norton). Will our quintuplet of action heroes exfiltrate the girl? Or will they fall to the hands of a man known only as The Assassin (Novak)?

    Coming hot on the heels of the Jim Jones Guyana tragedy, which occurred in November of 1978, Force: Five reimagines the tale if Benny the Jet, Richard Norton, and the rest of gang showed up at Jonestown and saved the day. It's also reminiscent of other newsworthy cults of the time, such as the Rajneesh group, which is what the Netflix documentary series Wild Wild Country is all about. However, Force: Five also a comedy, complete with a Kill and Kill Again (1981) vibe, or a certain A-Team sensibility. Imdb.com even claims it's a remake of Hot Potato (1976). Which would explain why it reminded us so much of...Hot Potato.

    While it's ostensibly rated R, it feels very PG in its execution. The triumph of the Robert Clouse standout Gymkata (1985) isn't exactly threatened here, because Force: Five contains more than enough stupidity, but the stuntwork is very good, and there are some amusing "classic 1981 drive-in" Kung-Fu fights along the way. But there are long stretches with actionless moments, which slow things down.

    It was nice to see a young Richard Norton, who looks alarmingly like Matthew McConaughey from Dazed and Confused (1993) here. It really could be his doppelganger. Bob Schott as Carl is a classic meathead, and it was nice to see Amanda Wyss, no matter for how short a time, here as well. Wyss has been in an impressive number of 80's classics, including A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), Better Off Dead (1985), and Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982), among others. This was so early in her career, she was credited as Mandy Wyss. Interestingly, she was on the short-lived TV series Jessica Novak, and Force: Five has Mel Novak. Coincidence?

    Anyway, Force: Five is a bit like a cross between Never Say Die (1994) and Catch the Heat (1987). The former for the cult aspect, and the latter for the "Karate Comedy" aspect. It all opens with a funky theme song and it's perfect for the drive-ins and grindhouses of the early 80's. It shouldn't be confused with Heroes Three (1983).

    Also not to be confused with the 1975 TV movie Force Five (note the missing colon), this Force: Five was released on a Media tape during the golden era of VHS. Overall, it has some decent moments but there's really no "wow factor" here. The cast is good, and it's all very competent, but a little something extra really would have fleshed it all out.
  • This is sometimes silly but easy to take martial arts escapism that benefits from its spin on director Robert Clouses' genre formula. In this instance, the "hero" is a collection of five specialists (hence the title) who never have a hard time wading through many bad guys. Other than some interesting touches (the bull, the intense torture sequences) this isn't of any real distinction, it's just decent undemanding fun. The cast in this thing aren't great as actors - some of them, anyway - but when it comes to kicking ass, they accomplish their mission. The movie, a remake of the earlier feature "Hot Potato", has an acceptable pace to it and a moderately entertaining finale (although it really doesn't have much action in it).

    A bunch of performers familiar to fans of B movies are featured in this straightforward story of Jim Martin (Joe Lewis) hired to retrieve a brainwashed rich girl from the clutches of religious cult leader Reverend Rhee (Bong Soo Han). For the mission, he assembles a team of four associates: Lockjaw (Sonny Barnes), Ezekiel (Richard Norton), Billy Ortega (Benny Urquidez), and Laurie (Pam Huntington), and also breaks Willard (Ron Hayden) out of prison so he can serve as their helicopter pilot.

    One may have to suspend their disbelief with this, but it *is* amusing in any event. As was said, there's not a lot of action, and our heroes have such little trouble with the enemy that some viewers may feel underwhelmed. It's fairly violent at some points but isn't as gory as viewers might want it. Production design, photography, and music are all adequate, and you might derive some entertainment from seeing people such as Peter MacLean (the sheriff in "Squirm") as a drunken senator, Amanda Wyss ("A Nightmare on Elm Street") as Cindy, Tom Villard ("Popcorn") as one of Rhees' many disciples, and Mel Novak ("Game of Death") as an inept assassin.

    Watchable enough for devotees of this genre.

    Seven out of 10.
  • poe4262 November 2012
    Warning: Spoilers
    It's amazing when one stops to think about it: Robert Clouse directed perhaps the greatest martial arts movie of them all (ENTER THE DRAGON), then proceeded to plummet downhill as fast as he possibly could. He went from the very apex (although I actually prefer the fight scenes in WAY OF THE DRAGON and GAME OF DEATH- as seen in the documentary A WARRIOR'S JOURNEY, anyway- to those in ENTER THE DRAGON) to fumbling through more BAD movies than your average Z-grade director. Once again, Joe Lewis is the sole saving grace in a film (the other was JAGUAR LIVES!); by dint of his performance (which should've been expanded, since he was the only actor worth his chops in this one), he makes this one worth watching- despite Clouse's aforementioned propensity for screwing up potentially good action movies. (Come on: GAME OF DEATH, GYMKATA...?) FORCE: FIVE is essentially a remake/ripoff of ENTER THE DRAGON, by a man who should've known better.
  • It seems that director Robert Clouse was hit by a brain wave one day; that by basically mimicking his very own Kung Fu classic, Enter The Dragon, he might likewise repeat the financial returns. Sadly, as good as the idea seemed on paper, in practice it didn't quite come off as evidenced with the resultant film in question. Ultimately, this just doesn't have the star power of the incomparable Bruce Lee to drive it and in all honesty, there simply isn't enough action on show to make it particularly memorable as a martial arts film either.

    Having said this, the film is a fairly enjoyable little romp in its own right and certainly boasts an amazing assemble of martial arts stars on show with the likes of genuine kickboxing legends, Joe Lewis and Benny Urquedez (who fares the best in this film, fight wise) plus Australian martial arts sensation and star of many a B-movie, Richard Norton (here sporting a particularly bad goatee!) and in the main villainous role, a genuine Hapkido master in the shape of Bong Soo Han. Certainly, the incredible line up was my main reason for tracking this hard to find flick down in the first place and whilst I can't in all honesty state that it is a classic by any stretch of the imagination, I will say that it is certainly worth a watch if you are a fan of the genre.
  • forget about acting,plot or dialogue.they are all bad.this is pure martial arts movie and not much else.most of the fight scenes are pretty good,though a few are also pretty lame.there are lots of plot holes and inconsistencies in this one.if these kind of thing bother you,forget this movie.you will be very disappointed.if you enjoy pure action,this may be your movie.many of the people in the movie are martial arts champions of the day and that doesn't usually mean good acting(except for Chuck Norris).the sound effects are of course,horrible,which is not at all surprising,since the budget was probably non existent.this movie is hard to find and like many films of that era and genre,is now considered a classic.i found the movie entertaining,due to the bad acting,bad sound effects and plot holes.you can have a lot of fun picking apart the movie(and i mean,a lot of fun)or you can just sit back,shut your brain of and be entertained.either way,(if this is your kind of film)i think you will have fun for about 90 minutes. "Force Five"is a 8/10* for me
  • Nice movie, but the fights can not compare technically to Bruce Lee's style.

    I really liked the "raging" bull, like Minotaurus in the labyrinth. The plot however is really simple and a happy end is guaranteed. I think that I never saw one of the actors before, anyway the are doing a good job.

    The level of violence is above average, do not expect bloody shoot-outs, it is mostly hand-to-hand combat. Also the villain likes to torture his victims during interrogation.

    The final fight is ok, it could have been more intense.

    Enjoy this hidden gem and relax your brain. If you do not like it, watch Enter the Dragon.
  • "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.
  • (1981) Force: Five ACTION ADVENTURE

    Co-written and directed by Robert Clouse, it has a senator employing the services of an agent, Jim Martin (Joe Lewis) to save his daughter, Cindy (Amanda Wyss) away from a cult-like leader, Reverend Rhee (Bong Soo Han) and his disciples along with his bulky sidekick, Carl (Bob Schott) confined on an island. Jim does this by assembling his own group pf fighters, such as his former flame, Laurie (Pam Huntington), Lockjaw (Sonny Barnes), Ezekiel (Richard Norton), Billy Ortega (Benny "the Jet " Urquidez) and a guy who was supposed to be confined in a Central American prison named Willard (Ron Hayden) , also called "Force: Five".

    It is one of those movies in which if users do "not" know who some of the characters are, then the overall experience may have sucked. But because I was already aware or familiar with professional kick boxers with the likes of Joe Lewis and Benny "The Jet" Urquidez along with Linda Rondstadt's former bodyguard by the name of Richard Norton whose martial arts filmography is vast, who worked for the likes of Chuck Norris to Jackie Chan makes this movie watchable. You just might say, there actual fighting experiences, particularly for Benny "the Jet" Urquidez (on his very first acting gig) and Richard Norton led them to bigger and better movies. Benny "the Jet" was part of one of the all time best on screen fights of all time called "Wheels on Meals" and "Dragons Forever" who sparred with Jackie Chan, while Richard Norton did fight choreography for "The Octagon" and was memorable with his fights on "Magical Crystals", "City Hunter", "Mr Nice Guy" and "Twinkle Twinkle Lucky Stars".
  • Good story abd good acting and cool martial arts scenes, actually a very nice screenplay as well as karate movie. Kind of like the A Team in that it's a small group of martial artists. A few romantic scenes to round it out. Good action scenes too. I recommend this movie if you want a martial arts move with a decent story.
  • This movie rocks! Not only is the action top notch, but it isn't being performed by a bunch of Hollywood "actors" who took karate lessons for a couple of weeks. I am talking about living legends of the martial arts. Master Han, the indelible Mr. Joe Lewis, not to mention "the jet". Team of five must rescue a girl from a island fortress ruled by a ruthless religious leader. Constant action and great "action" music. If you liked any martial arts movies made before 1985, then this will NOT dissapoint. Find it, rent it, buy it, watch it and thank me later.