Extreme Vengeance (1990) Poster

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5/10
A Standard Crime Drama
jjturley8 June 2008
Over the years, I have seen this same story many times, albeit with slight variations: A crime boss is put away in jail for 10 years. He gets out and plans to get revenge on the cop who put him away...

The usual stereotypes abound: The crime boss has an Italian name and runs a syndicate. He is ruthless. He smokes cigars. His hoods do all the dirty work for him. He has tons of beautiful models who take long swims in the pool of his mansion. And the cop who put the crime boss away is a good man. Too good, in fact. As a whistle blower in his own department, he had to leave the police force and go underground.

The usual things occur: There are car chases, shootouts, martial arts, and lots of rough-em-up scenes. The bad guys look bad, and the good guys look good! If only real life were so easy...

Still, there are a few twists in the story that were not expected. I was pleasantly surprised when this happened. The story also makes sense; it is not illogical or have plot holes. The bloodshed is also not excessive.

The acting and camera work are really quite good, better than expected for such a low-budget movie. There is a problem with the sound. It seems this is where funds were limited. It is perfectly audible, though. It just sounds too much like it was done in a sound stage, which fails when the location is outside like on the beach.

One extra treat in this movie: There is a fairly long scene with the exotic dancer Mésmera. Though she is not essential to the story, she is (fortunately) given a lot of air time.

The entire movie was shot in Los Angeles. For those of us who live here, it is a nice trip down memory lane to see 1990 again.
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6/10
A highlight of the film is the main theme song, "Restless" by Andy. Just Andy.
tarbosh220009 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
When evil mob boss Mario Blanco (De Costa) kills a young man named Michael (Kaidley), he upsets the wrong man: an angry ex-cop known only as David (Cox). David had to retire after 18 years on the force because he exposed police corruption. In other words, he "couldn't play by the rules". He flies from Chicago to L. A. to get justice for his son, and it's there he reconnects with his ex-wife Helen (Lemani) and their daughter Jenney (Bergee). He also starts his quest for revenge by working with his friend Billy (Lally) and ex-mobster Don Alfonso (Bordighi).

When David's girlfriend Sally (Hamilton) follows him to California, his personal troubles break loose and melodrama rains down. Things get worse when Blanco's goons beat up his wife and attempt to rape his daughter. David wasn't home at the time because he was watching a snake dancer (Mesmera). Now nothing is going to stand in the way of David's EXTREME VENGEANCE!

If it's one thing we love here at Comeuppance Reviews, it's when a surly elderly man takes out the trash. By that we mean by shooting them, blowing them up, creating a convoluted exploding soccer ball, poisoning their pasta, whatever the case may be. Extreme Vengeance is a micro-budgeted mob movie that delivers the surly. And the elderly. In spades. The presence and the performance of David A. Cox as David (please tell me this is how he is in real life) is a joy to behold. You put that together with his fashion choices and you've got quite a heady mix.

Of course, the similarities to the Death Wish series are rather obvious, and in case AIP thought that wasn't clear enough, their tagline for the VHS box is "His Death Wish Has Just Begun".

Is that a reference to the fact that they thought the Bronson series was over by that point? Because they were wrong - Death Wish V: The Face of Death came out in 1994. A per usual with AIP, the people featured on the box are not in the movie. Nevertheless, David and Blanco make good nemeses for each other - they both openly proclaim that they hate wimps.

Blanco looks like an overweight Hal Linden and clearly he's the ultimate villain for the grumpy grandpa to face off against.

According to the imdb, Cox had a small role in North by Northwest (1959). It's fascinating to think that not only does his career stretch back that far, but as an actor one minute you're working with Hitchcock, and in the blink of an eye you're starring in an AIP movie with practically no budget, pacing issues, amateurish technical qualities and muddy audio and filled with non-professional actors. Of course, for us that's all part of the fun and not at all a bad thing. Director Roger Zahr got his movie into stores and that's extremely impressive. About as extreme as the vengeance, you might say.

A highlight of the film is the main theme song, "Restless" by Andy. Just Andy. It's a catchy synth-pop ditty that follows David around as he does all the important things: arriving at Burbank airport, picking up his luggage, hunting for badguys in the strip mall with Dr. Deli, etc. Once heard, never forgotten.

Writer/director Zahr is indeed multi-talented. He also worked on the film's soundtrack, including the synths and, according to the credits, "percution". We assume they mean "percussion". As we always say, when your movie credits feature spelling errors, you know you're in for cinematic gold. Or at least an experience that is very much unlike most others and well out of the mainstream. That's what makes Extreme Vengeance and others like it so enjoyable to watch, and so fascinating: they're not just time capsules, they seem to have come from another world entirely.

If that sounds good to you, then Extreme Vengeance will float your boat.
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