Collins English Dictionary defines the term “Extreme Sport”
as “a sport that is physically hazardous, such as bungee jumping or
snowboarding.” That is a really broad
term that can be used to cover many different sports. Most sports are physically hazardous in one
way or another. Football involves
tackling and broken bones. Hockey
involves body checking and possible hits with sticks. Soccer and baseball have cleats that could
tear up a shin if they make contact, which they sometimes do. Each of these physical hazards could fall
under the definition of extreme sports, yet the sports don’t. Extreme sports are considered dangerous by
nature, and not by other people playing the sports with you. And that’s the big difference.
I know I started this post off like a cliché best man speech
at a wedding. The only reason I did that
is to help separate the extreme sports from the rest, since this week’s movie
involves an extreme sport. Drop Zone was one of the many 1990s and
2000s movies that took an extreme sport and used it in the film in order to try
and be more hip or cool for the audiences.
In this case, the 1994 film starring Wesley Snipes took skydiving and
incorporated it into a crime story. U.S.
Marshall Pete Nessip (Wesley Snipes) is transporting convict Earl Leedy
(Michael Jeter) between prisons when the plane they are on is attacked by Ty
Moncrief (Gary Busey). The attacker
takes Leedy by skydiving out of the plane and uses him to steal undercover agents’
identities from government facilities.
Pete Nessip must track down the thieves by learning to skydive from
Jessie Crossman (Yancy Butler). Other
stars include Corin Nemec, Kyle Secor, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, and Mickey Jones.
As I said, the 1990s and 2000s were two decades where many
movies tried to capitalize upon a rising interest in extreme sports. In fact, Drop
Zone wasn’t even the only skydiving movie to come out in 1994. Three months earlier, a movie called Terminal Velocity was released which saw
Charlie Sheen playing a skydiving instructor in a spy action movie. Something in 1992 or 1993 had spawned the
idea that skydiving would make for good action, and that idea has never
disappeared from the minds of screenwriters.
More recent movies like 2007’s Shoot
‘Em Up and 2013’s Iron Man Three
used people falling from planes as elements of their action sequences. It might not always work (the concept is very
dependent on effects, due to the concept being life-threateningly dangerous for
an actor to perform), but skydiving is used again and again in movies.
Another movie that comes to mind when I think of extreme
sports in movies is a film called Extreme
Ops. The 2002 action thriller
starring Devon Sawa, Rufus Sewell, Rupert Graves, and Bridgette Wilson featured
a group of extreme sports enthusiasts who travel to the Alps for some
snowboarding and stuff. They stumble
upon a war criminal who tries to kill them for finding him. The movie mostly involves snowboarding, which
might be the most popular of all extreme sports. Well, either that or skateboarding. They’re very similar, as is surfing. But I’ll get to those later. Extreme
Ops is filled with stunts involving snowboarding and was meant to gain an
audience from the teens and 20-somethings who watched the X Games for
snowboarding, or enjoyed snowboarding themselves. Other movies that have used snowboarding
throughout the years are 2004’s Most Xtreme
Primate, 1998’s Jack Frost (the
Michael Keaton one), and some 2008 Tom Green movie called Shred.
Moving onto skateboarding, it might be the extreme sport
most represented in movies. There are a
lot of different movies with skateboarding because it is such an easily
accessible sport for people. It is easy
enough to come across a skateboard that most anyone can do it. The one movie that most people probably want
me to mention here is Back to the Future
since the franchise features a skateboarding scene in each installment. But those movies aren’t about the
skateboarding. They aren’t about the
“extreme sport” that isn’t really all that extreme. They simply feature a character who uses a
skateboard. More recently (if you call
the mid-2000s recently), there were a couple of movies that were about
skateboarding. In 2003, audiences were
given the comedy Grind, about four
aspiring skateboarders trying to go pro.
2005 saw the release of Lords of
Dogtown, a telling of the rise of skateboarding as a sport. This is one sport that has only really risen
in movies, and never fallen. It is
always there, whether in the forefront, or looming in the background.
Surfing, however, never really broke through as a movie
sport. Sure, there have been big
splashes made by surfing in movies, with films like 1991’s Point Break and 2002’s Blue
Crush coming out over the years.
Even more recently than that, there was 2006’s Surf School and 2012’s Chasing
Mavericks. Yet it’s not a sport that
really sticks with people. Much like
skydiving, it has been better served as the backdrop or an action set-piece,
rather than the crux of the movie. As
silly as the scene is, the moment in Escape
From LA in which Snake surfs is one of the more memorable parts of the
movie because the surfing isn’t played out.
It happens in that one scene and that is it. There is no need to drag the extreme nature
of it over the entire film. Give one
shot of adrenaline with it and move on, instead of dragging it out so any of
the extreme elements are neutered by abundance.
Racing is another sport sometimes considered extreme, but
I’m going to skip that one since racing is such a bigger beast than most of
these sports I’m looking at. I’m going
to move onto climbing. Now, I don’t mean
kids climbing trees, or someone climbing something to get away from someone
else. When climbing is considered an
extreme sport, it is the climbing of cliffs or mountains. Stuff like that is extreme because one wrong
move means falling to your death, or to serious injury. The best representation of the extreme nature
of climbing is 2003’s Touching the Void,
a documentary (with re-enactments) about two climbers who try to climb a
mountain in South America only to face life threatening situations. It’s tense and exciting. It is exactly what a movie about climbing
should be. The movie still stands as the
pinnacle of extreme climbing in movies.
It wasn’t the first and wasn’t the last, but I would stand by it being
the best. Other movies that featured
climbing of this sort, whether prominently or in small doses, were the 2000
movie Mission: Impossible II, 1993’s Cliffhanger (the former namesake for an
amusement park ride at Canada’s Wonderland, much like Drop Zone), and 1975’s The
Eiger Sanction, starring Clint Eastwood.
More recently, the 2009 Australian horror flick The Loved Ones and the 2013 action movie GI Joe: Retaliation featured prominent climbing moments. There’s something about climbing that works
for movies in ways that other extreme sports seem to not work. For some reason, it is tenser when you’re
watching someone climb than when you see them surfing.
As I have mentioned numerous times in this post, extreme
sports are a good way to infuse a movie with action. They are a shot of adrenaline that keeps the
pulse of the audience racing when a movie needs it. They are a perfect way to get everyone back
into a movie if it has been lacking excitement.
Or they are a great way to heighten the stakes and tension that has been
built up to that point in the film. They
don’t tend to work completely as the main plot point in a movie, but they make
for some great action sequences. Drop Zone suffers a little bit for being
so much about skydiving. The idea of
skydiving to pull off crimes is an interesting one, yet the buildup of the main
character learning to skydive in order to better understand the criminals provided
some weaker moments in the movie. Had
there been a mixture of extreme athletics (as in Point Break) or just less skydiving all around, the crime movie
would have felt a little tighter. Still
entertaining though, and I do appreciate that much.
Extreme sports haven’t been quite as prevalent in this
decade as the two previous, but they are still there. I mentioned a few movies featuring moments of
extreme sport that have come from the past five years. And with the Point Break remake coming out later this year, extreme sports could
make a huge comeback. All that is needed
is a new extreme sport, and there will be movies made that shoehorn it into the
plot. I can’t wait for the day when we
get Deep Zone and Terminal Buoyancy, two movies within
three months that are about crime that involves extreme deep sea diving. That will be the day.
There are obviously a bunch of notes from this movie. By a bunch, I mean a lot. Let’s get the notes started:
- Drop Zone was suggested to me by @nickissac.
- You already know that Wesley Snipes was the star of Drop Zone. He was also in Money Train. So was an actor named Keith Leon Williams.
- Gary Busey is another actor who was already featured in the Sunday “Bad” Movies. He was in The Gingerdead Man.
- And the third star of the movie, Yancy Butler? She was in Hansel and Gretel Get Baked.
- There’s an actor named Robert LaSardo in Drop Zone. He was also in Death Race.
- Did you notice Clark Johnson in Drop Zone? He’s one of the people from Iron Eagle II.
- How about Kimberly Scott? She was already in the Sunday “Bad” Movies in Santa, Jr. Now she has made her second appearance by being featured in Drop Zone.
- Finally, we come to Claire Stansfield. She was in Drop Zone. She was also in a movie called Steel, which seems to be coming up a lot since being featured.
- Another movis I mentioned in this post that I have already covered is Surf School.
- Have you watched Drop Zone? Have you watched Terminal Velocity? Have you watched any of the movies I mentioned? Do you like extreme sports being featured in movies? There is a comments section where you can discuss anything about this post, including how bad I am at writing.
- You can also use the comments to suggest a future movie for me to watch as a part of the Sunday “Bad” Movies. Then you will be mentioned in the notes (when I watch the movie), and your name will go on my suggestors page (also when I watch the movie). You could also suggest to me on my Twitter account or my email: sundaybadmovies@gmail.com
- Next week’s movies is Tracers, a recent Taylor Lautner flick about parkour. Two weeks in a row, I get unconventional sports movies. I’ve already seen the movie, and since it’s new, next week will be more of a review than anything. See you then.
No comments:
Post a Comment