Snake Eater III: His Law | |
---|---|
Directed by | George Erschbamer |
Written by | John Dunning W. Glenn Duncan (original novel) |
Produced by | John Dunning Irene Litinsky André Link (executive) |
Starring | Lorenzo Lamas Minor Mustain Tracey Cook Scott "Bam Bam" Bigelow |
Cinematography | Jacques Fortier |
Edited by | Jacques Jean |
Music by | Tim Broughton John Massari |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Cinépix/Famous Players (Canada) Paramount Pictures (U.S.) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | CAD$4,200,000 [1] |
Snake Eater III: His Law is an action thriller film directed by George Erschbamer, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Minor Mustain, Tracey Cook and Scott "Bam Bam" Bigelow. It is the third and penultimate installment of the Snake Eater franchise, after 1989's Snake Eater and 1990's Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster . Lamas, in his last series appearance, returns as Vietnam veteran Jack "Soldier" Kelly, who attempts to save a dropout student from sex trafficking biker gangs.
Jack "Soldier" Kelly received a phone call from the Molisons, a couple who heard about him on the news. They tell him of their daughter Vivian, who approached a biker gang called Hell's Fury to prepare her college thesis, and ended up being groomed by them into a life of sexual servitude. Kelly enlists the help of an old friend, fellow biker turned private investigator, "Cowboy". They get information about the gang from a stripper named Fran, the ex-girlfriend of a prominent Hell's Fury henchman, the brutal "Goose". In exchange, Soldier arranges for her to room with his own girlfriend Hildy for protection. Kelly forces "Goose" to talk, only for him to reveal that Vivian has already been sold into slavery to another gang, the Outlaws.
Aware that his ex has snitched on him, Goose manages to find her whereabouts and travels to her new residence, where he kills her. In retaliation, the crafty Kelly sneaks into Goose's house and rigs his toilet so that his gets electrocuted via his urine stream when he relieves himself. A confrontation ensues with the rest of Hell's Fury and their leader Turk, who are defeated, leaving Soldier and Cowboy to go after the Outlaws. Soldier modifies a truck with a snowplow blade and, although vastly outnumbered, they launch their final assault on the group's headquarters. [1]
Franchise owners Cinépix opened negotiations with Lamas for a third Snake Eater at the same time they exercised their option for the second film in late 1988. [2] However, the actor had to wait much longer than he expected for it to get made, likely due to the judicial battle that delayed the release of the first sequel. [3]
Snake Eater III originated as an adaptation of Rafferty's Rules, the first book in the Rafferty series of crime novels by Australian-based American author W. Glenn Duncan, whose rights had been acquired from Duncan's literary agency Curtis Brown. Duncan had no involvement after that, as he harbored no illusion of maintaining creative control against the film production machine, and saw the sale purely as a money play. The script was later reworked into a "Soldier" Kelly adventure, although most other characters remain and Duncan's estate found that the screenplay stuck reasonably close to its inspiration. [4]
This was the feature debut of actress Tracey Cook, who went on to greater acclaim on television. Cook later remembered the picture as "pretty poorly done, but hey, it was fun", adding that although it featured her only on-screen nudity to date, "actually it was quite a respectable role, and I still don't have a problem with it". [5] Similar to the first movie's inclusion of celebrities Ronnie Hawkins and Larry Csonka in supporting roles, professional wrestler Scott "Bam Bam" Bigelow was added as a bit of novelty casting. [6] Filming was scheduled to start on August 26, 1991, [7] and stretched into late September. [8] Like the previous sequel, it was shot in Montreal, Quebec, the historic home of production company Cinepix. [9] The budget was estimated at CAD$4,200,000, the highest in the series. [1]
The film was screened for industry professionals at the 1992 American Film Market on March 3, 1992, in association with Moviestore Entertainment, an U.S. independent that frequently dealt with Canadian producers. [10] According to producer John Dunning, Snake Eater III was the first Canadian picture sold for general release in China. [6] Paramount Pictures, which acquired the film's U.S. video rights, projected sales of 20–22,000 units. [11]
In Canada, Snake Eater III debuted in Cinépix's hometown of Montreal on August 21, 1992, both in an English version and a French version named L'Indomptable III: Sa Loi (lit. 'The Untameable III: His Law'). [12] It was later seen in the capital of Ottawa starting on September 18, 1992, also via Cinépix/Famous Players Distribution. [13]
Snake Eater III was released on in Canada and the U.S. on October 7, 1992. [8] [14] As with the previous sequel, the tape was distributed by Cinépix sister company C/FP Video in Canada, and by Paramount Home Video in the U.S. [14] [15]
Scripps Howard columnist Mike Pearson, who had called the original a "guilty pleasure", took a much sterner stance towards the third installment, writing: "I'm trying to figure out if the people who made Snake Eater III are brain damaged, or if that's their target audience". He deemed the film "mindlessly violent and shamelessly stupid." [16] The Motion Picture Annual wrote that "[t]he law of diminishing returns is clearly in evidence in this third installment of the Canadian-made Snake Eater series" and, despite is being adapted from novel, complained that "the film has so little plot that Vivian runs away twice", and that the film's motel setpiece seemed lifted from a similar one in Near Dark . [15] British reviewer John Elliott's Guide to Home Entertainment deemed it "[a]nother assembly-line tale, full of bloodshed, violence and fury". [17]
Commenting on the wider video release, The Canadian Press' Christopher Johnston assessed that the film delivers "exactly what renters expect", advising that "[t]he fight scenes are not for the squeamish, but viewers will find some welcome comic relief." [18] The exploitation-friendly Joe Bob Report, whose publisher Joe Bob Briggs featured the series several times on his Drive-in Theater show, was again one of the film's few apologists. Although one member of the newsletter's review committee called the film a "predictable, low-budget Dirty Harry -type film", the majority found it to be a "better than average" sequel and the "best Snake Eater yet" with "good pace, interesting plot, humor". However, the "very weak" sidekick played by Minor Mustain was widely criticized. [19]
Cinépix expressed interest in re-hiring Lamas for a fourth Snake Eater picture, but following his rise to mainstream stardom with the TV series Renegade , his contractual demands became too high for the Canadian company. Dunning felt that Reno Raines, Lamas' character on Renegade was derivative of Jack "Soldier" Kelly, although Lamas' interest in biker culture predated the creation of either. [6] Hawk's Vengeance , a spinoff film where the character of Jack Kelly—briefly played by Canadian actor Pierre Gendron—gets murdered, was released in 1997. Erschbamer and Lamas went on to re-team on Final Round, which was made in collaboration with longtime production partner Mike Erwin.
Metal Gear is a franchise of stealth games created by Hideo Kojima. Developed and published by Konami, the first game, Metal Gear, was released in 1987 for MSX home computers. The player often takes control of a special forces operative, who is assigned the task of finding the titular superweapon, "Metal Gear", a bipedal walking tank with the ability to launch nuclear weapons.
Rabid is a 1977 independent body horror film written and directed by David Cronenberg. An international co-production of Canada and the United States, the film stars Marilyn Chambers in the lead role, supported by Frank Moore, Joe Silver, and Howard Ryshpan. Chambers plays a woman who, after being injured in a motorcycle accident and undergoing a surgical operation, develops an orifice under one of her armpits that hides a phallic/clitoral stinger she uses to feed on people's blood. Those she bites become infected, and then feed upon others, spreading the disease exponentially. The result is massive chaos, starting in the Quebec countryside, and ending up in Montreal. Rabid made $1 million in Canada, making it one of the highest-grossing Canadian films of all time. A remake of the same name, directed by Jen and Sylvia Soska, was released in 2019.
The Ghost and the Darkness is a 1996 American historical adventure film directed by Stephen Hopkins and starring Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas. The screenplay, written by William Goldman, is a fictionalized account of the Tsavo man-eaters, a pair of male lions that terrorized workers in and around Tsavo, Kenya during the building of the Uganda-Mombasa Railway in East Africa in 1898.
Fernando Álvaro Lamas y de Santos was an Argentine-American actor and director, and the father of actor Lorenzo Lamas.
Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater is a 2004 action-adventure stealth video game developed and published by Konami for the PlayStation 2. It was released in late 2004 in North America and Japan, and in early 2005 in Europe and Australia. It was the fifth Metal Gear game written and directed by Hideo Kojima and serves as a prequel to the entire Metal Gear series. An expanded edition, titled Metal Gear Solid 3: Subsistence, was released in Japan in late 2005, then in North America, Europe and Australia in 2006. A remastered version of the game, Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater - HD Edition, was later included in the Metal Gear Solid HD Collection for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and PlayStation Vita, while a reworked version, titled Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater 3D, was released for the Nintendo 3DS in 2012. The HD Edition of the game was included on the Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Vol. 1 compilation for Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on October 24, 2023. The same year, Konami announced a remake, entitled Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, set to release for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S in 2024.
David Hayter is a Canadian-American actor, screenwriter, director, and producer. He is well known as the English-language voice actor for Solid Snake and Naked Snake in the Metal Gear video game series. He wrote the film X-Men and co-wrote X2 and Watchmen, and was awarded the Saturn Award for Best Writing in 2000 for his work on X-Men. Hayter voiced King Shark on The Flash.
Lorenzo Fernando Lamas is an American actor. He is widely known for his role of Lance Cumson, the irresponsible grandson of Angela Channing—played by Jane Wyman—in the soap opera Falcon Crest (1981–1990), for which he received a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film.
My Bloody Valentine is a 1981 Canadian slasher film directed by George Mihalka and written by John Beaird. It stars Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck. The plot tells about a group of young adults who decide to throw a Valentine's Day party, only to incur the vengeful wrath of a maniac in mining gear who begins a killing spree.
No Exit is a 1995 Canadian action film directed by Damian Lee, starring Jeff Wincott, Sven-Ole Thorsen, Richard Fitzpatrick, Joseph Di Mambro and Guylaine St-Onge. Wincott stars as an anti-violence academic who ends up killing a man responsible for the loss of his unborn child, and is abducted by a millionaire to star in his illegal, fight-to-the-death TV program. In the U.S., the film was re-titled Fatal Combat.
Snake Eater is an action thriller film directed by George Erschbamer, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Josie Bell, Robert Scott and Ronnie Hawkins. Released on March 10, 1989, it was Lamas' first action film, and Cinépix's attempt at the type of action vehicle that was popular at the time. Harkening back to the Canadian company's exploitation roots, it infused the veteran vigilante storyline found in many contemporary films with "hicksploitation" elements, which many reviewers found distasteful but did not prevent its commercial success. Three more installments followed between 1991 and 1997.
Lionsgate Films is a Canadian-American film production and distribution studio founded in Canada in 1962. It is now a division of Lionsgate Studios and headquartered in Santa Monica.
Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster, also known as Snake Eater's Revenge, is a 1991 action film directed by George Erschbamer, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Larry B. Scott and Michele Scarabelli. It is the sequel to 1989's Snake Eater. Lamas returns as ex-Marine Jack "Soldier" Kelly, who teams with new sidekick "Speedboat" to protect an inner city neighborhood from drug traffickers.
The Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television's 6th Gemini Awards were held in March 1992 to honour achievements in Canadian television. There were no awards issued in 1991, so this year’s awards covered productions from 1991 and 1990. The awards show took place at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre and was broadcast on CBC Television.
The Rage is a 1997 Canadian–American action-thriller film directed by Sidney J. Furie, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Gary Busey, Kristen Cloke and Roy Scheider. In it, an FBI special agent (Lamas) teams up with a new partner (Locke) to track down a serial killer, who turns out to be an entire squad of disgruntled Vietnam veterans, whose leader's (Busey) murderous rage is rooted in sexual trauma sustained during the conflict.
Jim Henson's Mother Goose Stories is a children's television show hosted by Mother Goose, who tells her three goslings the stories behind well-known nursery rhymes.
Nicholas Joseph (Nick) Fury is a fictional character portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) media franchise, based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name. Prior to the formation of the MCU, Marvel Comics incorporated Jackson's likeness into the reimagined design of the character for The Ultimates. In the MCU, Fury is initially depicted as a master spy who is the Director of S.H.I.E.L.D.. Fury enacts the Avengers Initiative in response to Loki's invasion of Earth, a plan he previously developed after meeting Carol Danvers and learning of extraterrestrial threats.
Jackass Forever is a 2022 American reality slapstick comedy film directed and produced by Jeff Tremaine, along with producers Spike Jonze and Johnny Knoxville, and was released by Paramount Pictures. It is the fourth main installment in the Jackass film series, following Jackass 3D (2010). The film stars original Jackass members Knoxville, Steve-O, Dave England, Wee Man, Danger Ehren, Chris Pontius, Preston Lacy, as well as newcomers Sean "Poopies" McInerney, Zach Holmes, Jasper Dolphin, Eric Manaka, Rachel Wolfson, the Jackass film crew, and celebrity guests. This is the first Jackass film not to feature Ryan Dunn following his death in 2011 and the first without Bam Margera being a primary cast member as he was fired during production, appearing in only one skit.
Hawk's Vengeance is a 1996 Canadian action film directed by Marc F. Voizard, starring Gary Daniels, Jayne Heitmeyer, Cass Magda and George Chiang. The fourth installment of the Snake Eater franchise, it introduces "Hawk" Kelly, the British-raised stepbrother of the previous films' "Soldier" Kelly, who investigates his sibling's mysterious death amidst a gang war between ethnic Chinese and white skinheads. The series' usual star Lorenzo Lamas does not appear, and his role is recast with another actor during a brief expository scene.
Law of the Jungle, also known as Jungle Law, is a 1995 Canadian-American martial arts film film written, produced and directed by Damian Lee, starring Jeff Wincott, Paco Christian Prieto and Christina Cox. Wincott stars as a lawyer who has fallen on hard times, and must fight in underground tournaments organized by a mobster (Prieto) who was once his childhood friend. The film was retitled Street Law for its U.S. release.
The Swordsman is a 1992 Canadian fantasy action film directed by Michael Kennedy, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Claire Stansfield and Michael Champion. Lamas stars as a police detective tasked with finding a stolen sword said to have once belonged to Alexander the Great, while coming to grips with the fact that he may well be the reincarnation of said ancient monarch.