Black Commando (1982) Poster

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5/10
No Hopkins seizures here, sadly
Bezenby3 March 2019
Yes, this is a version of Othello and yes, that is Tony Curtis from Hollywood's golden age playing Iago. It would have been funnier is he was playing Othello, but you can't have it all I guess.

This is modern Othello, so now he's general Othello, a gun for hire in Africa who is working for the Red Cross when he claps eyes on Desdemona, an aid worker from the US. At first these two hate each other but soon it's romantic love montage time, all watched by the ever jealous, scheming, Iago. I've got to admit I felt like I was watching Tony Curtis, but it looked to me like Tony Curtis was channelling b-movie actor Cameron Mitchell!

Iago's speech is all modern and both he and Desdemona's father are dropping the 'N' word like this was written by Quentin Shakespeare, but if you're among the billions of people forced to read the play at school, you'll know how this one pans out anyway. It's one of Shakespeare's tragedies. For some reason Shakespeare wasn't in to warning his viewers by having a spoiler warning.

Things that drown out the dialogue all over this one include: A helicopter, explosions, the soundtrack (very loud Beethoven all the way through), and Tony Curtis strangely holding his hand over his mouth. That's what you'll end up watching this one for - Tony Curtis trying to be Iago in a b-movie with a seemingly one man crew. The worst part is that it dawns on you about halfway through that the film isn't bad enough to get some laughs and is kind of well made for a cheapy. There's even a bit of action thrown in for good measure.

Fernando Sancho appears as a President. He does not eat any chicken legs.
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5/10
It's certainly unlike any Shakespeare adaptations we've ever seen.
tarbosh2200029 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Now here's Shakespeare as they should've taught it in school: with blow-ups, gun-shooting, bazookas firing, and at least one minor character screaming while shooting a machine gun! Just as "The Bard" intended, of course. During both dialogue scenes and action bits, many different Beethoven pieces blare on the soundtrack. The whole thing has an odd and stilted pace.

We've got to give actor/director/Shakespeare dialogue adapter Max H. Boulois a lot of credit here. While the whole outing might not be perfect, we give him a lot of points for at least trying something different and not serving up a Jungle/War Slog as are so often churned out (both then and now). With Boulois as Othello, Joanna Pettet as Desdemona, and in a masterstroke of casting, Tony Curtis as Iago, Othello: The Black Commando is an oddity that's worth checking out.



Now, with all this talk of Shakespeare and Beethoven, you might be forgiven for thinking you're watching something highbrow. That's not exactly the case. It's still a B-grade actioner from the 80's; lead star Max Boulois looks (and acts?) like a precursor to the late Kimbo Slice; for some unexplained reason, only in the beginning of the film, he can read Desdemona's thoughts; and a band at a house party plays an unauthorized cover of "Oye Como Va". Over and over again. On top of that, Tony Curtis goes wild with his over-emoting, Bronx-accented Shakespeare. Again, just as intended in the 1600's.





While Othello: The Black Commando never broke into a wide audience and remains pretty under the radar (at least in the U.S., despite a VHS release), the cast as a whole has a noteworthy Euro-cult pedigree.

Because the film was shot in large part in Spain, Euro-Western stars Fernando Sancho and Aldo Sambrell make appearances, as does Nadiuska, who appeared in Leon Klimovsky's The People Who Own The Dark (1976), among other genre items. Ramiro Oliveros, who plays Cassius, was in The Pyjama Girl Case (1978) and Cross Of the Devil (1975). Gerard Barray, who plays Stafford, appeared in The Twilight Girls (1957), just one of many genre titles in his long career.

But because Othello: The Black Commando happens to not be a giallo, but a crazy action/Shakespearean mash-up, it's not likely to see a Blu-Ray release anytime soon. It's never namechecked by the well-known writers on Euro-Cult cinema.



To wrap things up, Othello: The Black Commando isn't like most action films of its ilk. And it's certainly unlike any Shakespeare adaptations we've ever seen.

But it's from the greatest decade ever, the 80's of course, and that golden era is still serving up surprises to this day. We're more than willing to overlook any minor technical flaws and amateurish moves in order to celebrate that. So, with a gesture with our palms in the air in a quizzical expression of "what the...?" we do indeed celebrate this odd duck of a movie.
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5/10
Fairly entertaining, but mired in various flaws
I_Ailurophile16 November 2022
Scarcely has the film begun and one can already discern issues that will plague the entire length. Most immediate is that 'Black commando,' Max H. Boulois' 1982 reimagining of 'Othello,' is one of those movies with such poor lighting during scenes at night or in low light that we might as well just be looking at a blank screen. There's also no getting around the fact that the sound design is terribly imbalanced such that environmental sounds, wind noise, and other sound effects are grating on the ears, while dialogue is too often either muddied or almost entirely subsumed in the blasts of uneven volume. Even the music - the sweet sounds of Ludwig van - is emphasized a bit too much in the mix. Jacques-Clément Duval's sound editing and Antonio Gimeno's film editing are both decidedly curt and inelegant, giving the feeling that the feature as we're seeing it has been chopped up with precious seconds removed that would have offered smoother transitions and sequencing. Such deficiencies in the technical craft are flummoxing since, in many ways, it's clear that the picture was not wanting in terms of financing.

Set aside the editing, still there's a crude brusqueness to the plot development that's off-putting. This feeling could possibly be attributed at least in part simply to the endeavor in and of itself to adapt Bill Shakes, though I also gather a sense that Boulois as writer specifically strained to cohesively connect the threads in terms of advancing the narrative. With all this having been said, I certainly admire the effort to bring an early seventeenth-century play into the twentieth century. I will say that this updated version arguably brings the themes of race to the forefront more than Shakespeare's play, specifically for modern viewers; despite the unfortunately undying human trait of prejudice, it's difficult to get a grasp on the particular dynamics of several centuries ago. 'Black commando' also plays up Othello's background as a military man; for instance, the first twenty minutes are comprised of action sequences more than anything else before the plot truly kicks in. Moreover, for all the changes and simplification that Boulois applied in his screenplay, one can unmistakably recognize the classic of English literature underlying the plot here.

I do think this is enjoyable and worth watching on its own merits, not least of all if one is a particular fan of someone involved. Anyway, it can also be fun to see such esteemed pieces of cultural history modified in new and inventive ways. (Please see the BBC's exemplary 2010 version of 'Macbeth,' starring Patrick Stewart and Kate Fleetwood, as a prime example.) And yet there are still other ways in which this film is troubled, and worse than the technical shortcomings are those ways in which the story is shortchanged. Even a cursory reading of the original play communicates significant time spent accentuating Iago's enmity and scheming, not least through soliloquys; it feels like this rendition gives us mere glimpses. Inherent to the nature of adaptations, the more aspects of the writing are altered (scenes and the overall story especially), the more important it becomes to discretely establish who characters are. 'Black commando' too often fails to do so. And for all this, and further weakness in the dialogue and scene writing, the feature also altogether struggles to communicate its plot. If one didn't have the advantage of foreknowledge, the context of some understanding of Shakespeare's work, then there are wide swaths of this iteration (primarily, the series of steps taken to undercut Othello's confidence in Desdemona) that would come off as mystifying. And that's in addition to already being disjointed in light of (a) the editing and (b) the fundamental changes of adaptation.

It's unfortunate that 'Black commando' is beleaguered with so many issues. I appreciate the work put into this from the cast and crew, and as both writer and director I recognize the earnestness and general skill Boulois possesses. Some combination of factors, and/or maybe just an honest lack of utmost capability in one capacity or another, resulted in a cavalcade of faults that severely diminishes what this could have been. I repeat, I did have a good time watching, but this is at best okay; it might have been great. Ultimately this is hardly an essential watch, more of something to fleetingly entertain on a lazy day, or if curious. I see the value 'Black commando' has to offer; would that there were more of it.
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3/10
Not good
Leofwine_draca6 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
OTHELLO, THE BLACK COMMANDO is a misguided attempt to update the classic Shakespeare play to the modern day, with indifferent results. The story is now set in Africa and follows the misadventures of a mercenary soldier general who ends up being betrayed by his own henchman, Iago. This is a poorly-shot, poorly made little movie that makes little sense despite copying the Shakespeare plot closely. The actors are unknown and the direction is limited, making this difficult to enjoy. The use of Beethoven on the soundtrack is intrusive and discordant, drowning out dialogue and more likely to induce a headache more than anything else. American viewers will be interested to see a slumming-it Tony Curtis playing the role of Iago, but he's hardly a reason to tune in.
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