Sunday, July 9, 2017

Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance (2015) and Action Franchises Going Crazy



Samurai Cop was a top tier bad movie.  It played everything as straight as it possibly could, genuinely trying to be a good movie within the b-movie landscape.  A lack of filmmaking skill on the part of every single aspect propelled it into that enjoyably bad stratosphere that few movies manage to reach.  It wasn’t entertaining out of irony.  It wasn’t entertaining because it was fun to make fun off.  Samurai Cop was a genuinely entertaining movie that just happened to be poorly made.

I discovered the movie in 2014 when it was included in the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  I’m not taking the credit for uncovering it and giving it to the masses.  All I’m saying is that I didn’t know about it until I scheduled it.  The name alone made me think that it was something I should include in my journey through bad movies.  Usually the name thing doesn’t work out, but in this case it did.  It quickly became one of my favourite movies from the blog, still only having two or three movies top it.  Of course I was excited to hear that a sequel had been announced and that there would be more Samurai Cop on the way.

Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance was released in 2015.  It fell into the trap that many action sequels fall into, and that took away from how enjoyable it could have been.  The first movie portrayed a skilled police officer who took down a Los Angeles gang.  He worked with his partner Frank (Mark Frazer) and it was their teamwork that helped them succeed.  The sequel didn’t take any of this into account.  It made Joe Marshall (Mathew Karedas) into an unstoppable legendary figure of crime fighting.  He could take down any and all threats without so much as a scratch.  Frank took a back seat, rarely participating in the action.  He simply moved Joe from one location to another.  It was less of a team and more of a mythical figure that fought crime.

This is a common occurrence throughout action films.  As franchises move forward, the setpieces must outdo each other.  They need to be bigger.  They need to be more spectacular.  This necessitates that the hero does more ridiculous things, which turns them into more of a superhero than the action star that they started out as.  Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance fell victim to this method of action filmmaking.

Throughout this post, I’m going to take a look at a few action franchises that followed the same path as Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance, and explain what worked or didn’t work about the path.  There are many reasons that it could or could not work.  It all depends on the specific franchise.  But we can learn from the examples what to do and what not to do when it comes to moving forward an action franchise.

The Fast and the Furious
One of the biggest franchises in action as of late has been a franchise about people driving cars.  The Fast and the Furious has eclipsed all other car movies to become the biggest name in driving action.  Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson, Ludacris, Tyrese, Paul Walker, and Michelle Rodriguez have helped to push the franchise into the stratosphere of popularity.  Who knew that would happen when it began with a simple movie about street racing?

The first movie, The Fast and the Furious, was released in 2001.  Paul Walker starred as Brian O’Conner, an undercover police officer who infiltrated the street racing world of Dom Toretto (Vin Diesel).  It was a masked remake of Point Break, replacing the surfing and stuff with cars and street races.  Everything was more grounded, with a semi-realistic yet simplistic take on the underground gangland of Los Angeles, and how street racing tied into it.  The characters were realistic.  The story was believable.

As the series progressed, however, things would change.  The franchise morphed from its underground street racing roots into an espionage series involving cars.  That began in the second movie as an on-the-run Brian O’Conner was brought in by police to use his driving skills to take down kingpin Carter Verone (Cole Hauser).  But it wouldn’t be until the fifth installment, Fast Five, that the series would truly go off the rails and become something new.  It would become the explosive popular action series that it currently is.

Fast Five followed close on the heels of Fast and Furious (the fourth movie), picking up right where the previous installment had left off.  Dom’s crew was breaking him out of a prison bus.  It was in this moment that the characters became mythological figures.  The movie proved that they could do anything.  Characters from previous movies banded together to create a super team that could survive driving off cliffs in convertible cars.  They stole police cars and dragged giant safes full of money behind their cars in city wide chases.  This was on the lower end of the crazy things that the characters would do throughout the sixth, seventh, and eighth installments.

Following the change of the characters from realistic street racers into superheroes with cars as their special powers, they did many crazy things.  Fast and Furious 6 saw the team take down a tank and a plane with their cars.  It also brought a character back to life.  Furious 7 saw one character run up a bus as it fell off a cliff, another character roll his car down a mountain with everyone inside surviving, and saw a third character flex a cast off of his arm and walk through the streets shooting a helicopter with the rail gun from a drone.  It also had cars parachuting out of a plane.  The eighth movie had a character winning a street race while driving a burning car backward, another character controlling every computerized car in New York, a character participating in a shootout while caring for a baby, and the whole team taking down a nuclear sub.  These action beats were a far cry from where the series began.

The other big note about the Fast and Furious franchise is how Dom Toretto became more and more of a legend.  It sort of started that way in the first movie when he was a cocky street racer who saw himself as the best in Los Angeles.  As the movies progressed, other characters began seeing him as the mythic figure that he thought himself to be.  He was a wanted criminal that the law couldn’t capture.  By the eighth installment, Mr. Nobody (Kurt Russell) was breaking two criminals out of prison simply because they were the only people who had ever tracked down Dom Toretto.  He was an uncatchable driver who proved at the beginning of the movie that a good driver could overcome any obstacles to win a race because the driver was all that mattered.  The cars don’t matter.  The driver does.  Dom’s driving solidified his mythical status among the people who watched the race.  He was no longer the grounded, cocky racer from the first movie.  He was a legend.

Die Hard
This one could probably be tied to the eras in which the movies were made.  I haven’t seen Die Hard with a Vengeance, so I can’t get as in depth as I got with the Fast and Furious franchise, which I’ve seen all of.  What it has in common with the other two franchises I’ve written about in this post is that the main character of John McClane (Bruce Willis) went from being a basic street cop to becoming a superhero by the time the franchise got to its fourth entry.

The first movie followed a smart ass New York City police officer who encountered a hostage taking while on a trip to a Christmas party in Los Angeles.  He worked his way through the building to free the hostages and take down the hostage takers one by one.  The situations were grounded in a reality with the dangers being believable, and John McClane sustaining injuries during his mission.  There were still some moments that gave a slight bit of spectacle, but the movie felt more like the real world than some heightened film universe.

By the time the fourth installment, Live Free or Die Hard, rolled around, John McClane was basically a superhero.  He was crashing cars into helicopters and safely diving from the wing of an airplane onto hard highway pavement.  The character had become immune to most situations that a person couldn’t physically survive.  In the fifth movie, A Good Day to Die Hard, the climactic battle happened in a nuclear reactive site, though both John McClane and his son came out of the climax without a hint of radiation poisoning.  The movies were no longer in that realistic world that the first Die Hard had set up.

The biggest difference between the Die Hard franchise and the other two discussed in this post was that John McClane didn’t become the heroic legend that the other characters became.  He continuously stumbled into the situations where he had to save the day.  It never had to do with him being called upon because of how many times he has taken down bad guys.  He just ended up in the situation every time.  He was not a legend.  John McClane was just a superhero.

Samurai Cop
Samurai Cop was like a low budget Lethal Weapon.  There was the buddy cop teaming of Joe Marshall and Frank.  They teamed up to go against a group of martial arts inspired gang members who were working to control the streets of Los Angeles with drugs.  The action story was fairly grounded, with the only real heightened stuff being that all of the people were martial artists.  Joe Marshall was the average cop, though he was good with the ladies and had learned the ways of the samurai.  Frank and Joe worked together and took down the gang piece by piece.

That all changed when the second movie came out some twenty-five years later.  The movie began with Frank investigating a possible gang war in Los Angeles.  There was only one man he could count on to help him stop the war from getting out of control.  That man was Joe Marshall, who had since left Los Angeles after the death of his girlfriend Jennifer (Kayden Kross).  Everyone in Los Angeles knew of Joe Marshall because of what he had done during the events of the first Samurai Cop.  They knew that if anyone could take down the gangs in Los Angeles, it was him.  That’s why Frank sought him out and brought him back to the city to fight crime.

Joe came back as a different person than when he had left.  Sure, it had been twenty-five years.  Add onto it that his girlfriend had been killed, and you have a changed man.  The thing is, it changed how the movie felt, too.  He was now seen as a legend.  He was an unstoppable force that the bad guys worked hard to stop, knowing full well that Joe Marshall would defeat them.  The bad guys knew about the narrative that had been sewn around Joe Marshall.  They believed it.  That’s how much of a mythical figure the man had become.

He also spent the twenty-five years becoming the superhero that so many action heroes become as their franchises progress.  When Joe came back into the story, he didn’t work with Frank all that much.  He fought most of the bad guys on his own.  When it came to the climactic fighting, Joe stormed the bad guys’ base by himself, with Frank coming in later to clean up what Joe left behind.  Joe was a one man killing machine, out to avenge the death of the woman he loved.  Frank watched from the sidelines as Joe took out every ninja and bad guy he encountered.  In two movies, he had accomplished what took two other, more popular franchises four installments to do.



Many action franchises have experienced growing pains in which they shifted from being grounded, mostly realistic looks at the characters dealing with dangerous situations to off-the-rails craziness.  The Fast and the Furious went from street racing to cars taking down a nuclear submarine.  Die Hard went from being trapped in a tower to taking down Russian terrorists in a nuclear site.  Samurai Cop went from stopping a drug ring to taking down an entire gang war single-handedly.  These are only three examples of this franchise trajectory.

Sometimes this path of action can work.  Fast Five, Fast and Furious 6, Furious 7, and The Fate of the Furious play up the insanity.  Instead of trying to place it in a world of realism, the world of the movies changed with the characters.  Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance wasn’t as successful at the transition.  They played right into the insanity of what was going on but tried to force it.  It didn’t play naturally into the world, particularly with the needless callbacks to the first movie.  Die Hard just… That’s one just removed any of the interesting character stuff that made the first movie stand out.  It was a grounded movie about a character.  The later movies felt like a different character in crazy situations.

Having the movies grow increasingly crazier all depends on the execution.  In some cases, it will work.  In other cases, it falls flat on its ass.  Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance was one of those movies that tried to go crazy without having done the work to get there.  It couldn’t back itself.  It went crazy for crazy’s sake, instead of trying to be entertaining.  It played into the fanboys by referencing what they loved in the most forced ways possible.  There was the potential to make something entertaining but it fell victim to something I’ve heard about before.  When someone tries to sincerely make something good and they fail at the basic filmmaking side of it, it can be highly entertaining.  However, if they try to ironically make an entertaining bad movie, it usually falls flat.  That’s what happened.  They ironically tried to recapture what seemed sincere in Samurai Cop and it hurt Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance.  I wish it had been better.  I love the first movie.

The notes section here should be fun:
  • Here’s the post for the first Samurai Cop movie.
  • Seven actors from Samurai Cop returned for Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance.  They were Mathew Karedas, Mark Frazer, Tom Gleason, Melissa Moore, Gerald Okamura, Joselito Rescober, and Jimmy Williams.
  • Mindy Robinson was in Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance.  She has also appeared in The Coed and the Zombie Stoner and Chicks Dig Gay Guys.
  • One of the main bad guys in Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance was played by Tommy Wiseau.  He is most famously known for making The Room.
  • Kristine DeBell had a role in Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance.  You might recognize her for being in A Talking Cat!?!
  • Finally, Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance featured Bogdan Szumilas, who was in Sandy Wexler.
  • Have you seen Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance?  What did you think of it? What do you think of any of these action franchises that go crazy as they move forward?  You can discuss any of these things in the comments.
  • The comments are also a place where you can suggest movies for me to watch in future Sunday “Bad” Movies posts.  Sometimes I write specifically about the movie and sometimes, like this week, I write about a topic related to the movie.  If you don’t want to put your suggestions in the comments, you can let me know on Twitter.
  • I have a snapchat where I sometimes put up clips of the bad movies I watch.  If you want to see this or any of the other random stuff I put up there, add me.  jurassicgriffin
  • Now that I have that sequel behind me, I’m going to move onto another movie and another week of the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  Officer Downe is on the docket for next week.  I don’t know too much about this movie.  It was suggested to me and I threw it into the schedule.  I’ll be watching it soon and I’ll have something about it up next week.  See you then.

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