Forced Vengeance
Forced Vengeance is a 1982 action film, starring Chuck Norris, Mary Louise Weller and Camila Griggs. The film was directed by James Fargo and written by Franklin Thompson and James Fargo.
Forced Vengeance | |
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Promotional film poster | |
Directed by | James Fargo |
Produced by | John B. Bennett |
Written by |
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Starring | |
Music by | William Goldstein |
Cinematography | Rexford L. Metz |
Edited by | Irving Rosenblum |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | |
Budget | $5 million[1] |
Box office | $6,660,333[2] |
Plot
When the owner and proprietor of the Lucky Dragon casino in Hong Kong refuses to let mobsters take over his business he and his family are hit. Dragon's chief of security, Josh Randall (Chuck Norris) goes looking for the head of the syndicate to exact revenge for the murder of his employer, friend and mentor.
Cast
- Chuck Norris – Chief Josh Randall
- Mary Louise Weller – Claire Bonner
- Camila Griggs – Joy Paschal
- Michael Cavanaugh – Stan Ramandi
- David Opatoshu – Sam Paschal
- Seiji Sakaguchi – Cam
- Frank Michael Liu – David Paschal
- Bob Minor – LeRoy Nicely
- Lloyd Kino – Inspector Chen
- Leigh Hamilton – Sally Tennant
- Howard Caine – Milt Diamond
- Robert Emhardt – Carl Gerlich
- Roger Behrstock – Ron DiBiasi
- Jimmy Shaw – Inspector Keck
- Richard Norton – Herb
Production
The film was originally known as The Jade Jungle. It had Norris' biggest budget yet, costing $5 million, and was from a major studio, MGM.[1] The title was changed during production to Forced Vengeance.[3]
Reception
Variety wrote, "In the unlikely event that a film historian stumbles across 'Forced Vengeance' 20 years from now, he would probably guess that it was made somewhere around 1974—75. In setting, plotting, themes and action motifs, latest Chuck Norris pic is incredibly reminiscent of those unlamented Yank-vs.-Hong Kong syndicate martial arties of that era. For Norris, who has given signs of trying to graduate from the genre, this is a step backwards, or at least is treading water."[4] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote that by the middle of the film, "bone-crunching, flesh-ripping violence so dominates the screen that the film simply starts drowning in a sea of blood. By the end, it's hard to care, let alone differentiate, between the good guys and the bad. Such wretched excess is especially lamentable because 'Forced Vengeance' starts off with a lot going for it: a serviceable, if familiar story (by Franklin Thompson), some likable people to root for, unfailingly photogenic and atmospheric Hong Kong locales (well photographed by Rexford Metz) and crisp direction by James Fargo, a Clint Eastwood alumnus."[5] Richard Harrington of The Washington Post called the film "one of Norris' less sterling efforts, a scratchy mono to the stereo of such earlier efforts as 'Return of the Dragon' and 'Force of One.' Part of the problem is a script that seems better suited to '60s television ... Another part of the problem is Norris' monotonous acting."[6] Jimmy Summers of BoxOffice wrote, "Maybe pairing Chuck Norris with MGM was just more than the karate star could handle. Instead of being one of his classiest movies, 'Forced Vengeance' is one of his worst ... The prence of MGM veterans Tom and Jerry is the sole indication that this is an MGM movie. Otherwise it has the out-of-focused, grainy look of a chop-socky epic from China."[7]
References
- Noted...: Chuck Norris Films Re-Enter Fight Scene Saltzman, Barbara. Los Angeles Times 2 May 1981: c9.
- Forced Vengeance at Box Office Mojo
- Film Notes BY GARY ARNOLD. The Washington Post 18 June 1982: W21.
- "Film Reviews: Forced Vengeance". Variety. July 28, 1982. 20.
- Thomas, Kevin (August 13, 1982). "'Vengeance' Sinks in a Sea of Gore". Los Angeles Times. Part VI, p. 6.
- Harrington, Richard (August 3, 1982). "Monotony With A 'Vengeance'". The Washington Post. B2.
- Summers, Jimmy (October 1982). "Forced Vengeance". BoxOffice. 54.