I like revenge flicks; especially the late ‘70s ones, but I had never seen Death Wish (1974). This works for a variety of subgenres for me: I’m in love with several rip-offs but I haven’t seen the originals. But I’m on a mission to right this wrong.
The Death Wish franchise is featuring actor
Charles Bronson in the role of Paul Kersey who is a vigilante that goes after
muggers. I’m a big fan of C’era Una Volta
Il West (1968), The Great Escape (1963),
Machine-Gun Kelly (1958), Telefon (1977) and St. Ives (1976) and so the idea of watching Charles Bronson
shooting bad guys in five more films sounded brilliant! I hope you enjoy
reading as much as I did watching and writing.
Paul Kersey [Charles Bronson;
because Steve McQueen, Clint Eastwood and Frank Sinatra turned down the part] lives in New
York where numerous murders take place. He is a liberal who’s against leaving the
city because that’s only for people who can afford it (hence undemocratic).
Some of his friends are radical and wish that there’ll be concentration camps
for the criminals and hate it that the tax payers can’t afford more police on
the streets.
When Paul’s at work, three punks break into his apartment, and when they
find out that his wife and his daughter - who are present - don’t have any
money they brutalize them and the poor girls end in the hospital. Paul and his
son-in-law go to the hospital. Paul’s wife dies. His daughter survives but in
order to get through the shock she’ll have to stay away from her father, as the
psychiatrist suggest, and anything else that would remind her of the traumatic
incident.
From then on Paul becomes what the police are calling the Vigilante, an
anti-hero who goes on a killing spree with his .32 pistol. He’s after all sorts
of criminals. Citizens seem to be on his side, and soon transform fear into
revenge. They take the law into their own hands and attack muggers and the
crime rate is dropping.
One of the punks
that broke into Paul’s apartment was a skinhead and another one painted a
swastika with his spray on the wall. The film spoke to ‘70s audiences that were
frightened by the increasing crime rate.
The kick-starter
of the Death Wish franchise was co-produced and directed by Michael Winner [The Sentinel (1977)], and it was
produced by Hal Landers [Damnation Alley
(1977)], Bobby Roberts [Death Wish II
(1982)] and presenter Dino De Laurentiis [Hannibal
(2001)]. In front of the cameras you’ll find known faces such as Hope Lange [Blue Velvet (1986)] and Jeff Goldblum [The Fly (1986)].
Death
Wish II (1982)
Paul Kersey
[Charles Bronson] now lives in L.A. [which doesn’t work well as a setting; N.Y.
was much better in the first film, but bear with me as this is a good flick],
where crime rate is going up. He gets robbed by muggers and goes after them. He
roughs up one of them. The criminals will break into his apartment and kill the
maid [Silvana Gallardo] and kidnap his daughter [Robin Sherwood from
Tourist Trap (1979)]. They take the
poor girl into a seedy place where they rape her, and when she tries to escape
she jumps off a window and she’s landing in spikes that penetrate her young
body and kill her. This is when the protagonist snaps and starts killing the
bad guys.
Dino De
Laurentiis sold the rights of the Death
Wish franchise (reportedly for
$200,000) to Cannon Films and said production company came up with this film
and the sequels bellow. This one was produced by Yoram Globus [The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)]
and Menahem Golan [Night Of The Living
Dead (1990)] and it was directed by Michael Winner. Oh, and there’s a car
crash scene; for trailer purposes I guess.
Death
Wish 3 (1985)
The only
complaint fans must have had from Death
Wish Ii (1982) was the L.A. setting, and this changed back to N.Y.C.
for Death Wish 3 (1985). This is
East New York where full scale riots will take place as a gang is terrorizing
citizens with a variety of crimes, from robbery to rape.
Paul Kersey
[Charles Bronson] returns to New York City, only to find his friend Charlie
dead. He is accused of the murder because he was found at the scene of the
crime. He ends up in jail. A cop offers Paul his freedom if he’ll accept going
back to the streets and start shooting criminals again. The deal is sealed and
Paul is back in action. The duo sees scumbags as cockroaches and wants them all
dead.
The box-office
success of the first two movies allowed director Michael Winner to go ape-shit
with this third instalment in the film series, as the finale is an eye-candy in
which on the one hand several cars are crashing and exploding (and so do
buildings that are set on fire) and on the other hand Charles Bronson steals
the show whilst bearing a machine-gun and kicking ass big time.
Death
Wish 4: The Crackdown (1987)
Paul Kersey [Charles
Bronson] has a dream that he’s shooting three rapists in a parking lot, and
when he pushes one of them to take a look at him, he sees his own face! That’s
a great idea, you know, Paul having nightmares about what he has done in all
the previous films, how his actions affected him psychologically, and how he’d
question the results of his journey, but it is not explored further by writer
Gail Morgan Hickman and director J. Lee Thompson [Cape Fear (1962)]. Also, they brought the action back to L.A.
So, we’re in Los
Angeles, where Paul Kersey is dating a woman for the last couple of years. Her
daughter is going on out with a guy and they smoke pot. One night the girl
decides to experiment with cocaine and she ends up in hospital after overdosing
and she dies. Her mother is a writer and will focus her career on articles
about drug awareness, while Paul kills the pusher responsible for her death.
This guy also killed the poor girl’s boyfriend because he threatened that he’d
talk to the police.
A rich man is
making an appearance saying that he lost his wife in a car accident and his
daughter to cocaine and comes to an agreement with Paul. He provides him with
information on the two major drug organizations in the city and Paul will do
the shooting. Watch out for a young Danny Trejo in a
small part, in what has to be the tamest flick of the Death Wish franchise.
There are dead bodies (actually, many dead bodies), but there are no tits, and
nothing seems as sleazy as things were in the previous entries.
Death
Wish V: The Face Of Death (1994)
Olivia Regent [Lesley-Anne Down from
From Beyond The Grave (1974)] is a
fashion designer, and what do you know, this industry is corrupt. The biggest
scumbag of them all is her ex-husband Tommy O'Shea [Michael Parks from
Django Unchained (2012)] who is a
mobster. Her boyfriend Paul [Charles Bronson] will step in the action and kick
some major fashion industry mob ass.
Set in N.Y. (but
actually filmed in Toronto), and written & directed by Allan A. Goldstein
[because Steve Carver reportedly was considered but couldn’t be afforded], this
is the last film in the Death Wish
franchise and it’s been 20 years since it hit theatres. There were talks back
in the day about a sequel called Death
Wish 6: The New Vigilante, but it never happened. We are now waiting for
the rumoured reboot.
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