Lone Hero
(2002)
Director: Ken
Sanzel
Cast: Lou Diamond Phillips, Sean Patrick Flanery, Robert Forster
I once said that I liked a good ol' motorcycle movie,
but sometime later I realized that, with the exception of the
absolutely insane and over-the-top Stone Cold, I
honestly couldn't think of a motorcycle movie that (overall) I could
honestly recommend to someone without hesitation. Let me make that
clearer - though I have liked documentaries on motorcycles and their
riders (On Any Sunday
and Biker Dreams),
I am talking about biker movies that are geared towards the
exploitation market. This may seem strange - after all, biker movies
seem to have the stuff a trash movie fan like myself would love, like
characters who take crap from no one, senseless violence, and the
inevitable appearances of motorcycle mamas.
Sometimes I have found one or two ingredients in these
movies executed pretty well, and I'm pretty sure my fond memories of
those rare exceptional moments temporarily deluded me on that
particular lazy day into thinking there were plenty of good motorcycle
movies. After some lengthy and seriously thought, I can now safely say
that I find motorcycle movies, even those with one or two redeeming
moments, a real bore. The characters are so dumb and aggressively
one-note in their chortling and sneering, the action is badly
choreographed and lame in itself, and erotic material is either totally
missing or seemingly geared to be PG-level at the most. Even variations
to the formula, like a gay motorbike gang (The Pink Angels)
or an all-female biker gang (She-Devils On Wheels) I have
found fall flat. As I said, apart from
Stone Cold, I can never recall a biker movie
that I've truly liked. Well, there is The
Stranger, though that's more packaged as a supernatural
revenge actioner. So when I came across Lone Hero, I
was fully prepared to hate it; not only was it a biker movie, but it
starred Lou Diamond Phillips, an actor I've never been very fond of.
Imagine my surprise when I discovered - well, I don't know if I can say
I truly liked it, but at the same time I can't say I loathed or
even simply disliked it.
Unlike just about all biker movies, Lone Hero doesn't
take place in the deserts of the American southwest, but instead takes
place in the wooded and mountainous wilderness of Montana. (How did you
guess this movie was filmed in Canada?) Not long after the movie begins, we are
introduced to the hero, John (Flanery, Boondock
Saints), a resident of the small town of Profit who isn't
exactly living a satisfying life. The only thing that seems to be
keeping John's town alive is its cheesy wild west theme park, with John
employed as one of the cowboys involved in the absolutely pathetic
shootout recreations the park puts on for the equally pathetic number
of visiting tourists. Making the situation even more unbearable is that
John's girlfriend Sharon (Tanya Allen) has been accepted to UCLA and
will have to leave soon, leaving no one for John to connect with except
Gus (Forster), the friendly grizzled trick shooter at the park. The
frustration John is obviously experiencing seems to come to a peak when
one night at the local bar, a sadistic biker by the name of Bart
(Phillips) and a pal of his not only beat up the owner of the bar and
rob him while John and the other patrons remain utterly helpless, but
remove the remaining after-hours entertainment in town by firing a
shotgun round into the jukebox, as well as the pool table. A man can
only take so much, so the next day when John sees Bart and his pal
wandering around the park, he decides to make a bluff with his
blank-loaded pistol and attempt a citizen's arrest. Surprisingly, it
works, and the two bikers are quickly thrown behind bars. Bart quickly
makes clear that he has a lot of friends, and that when they hear he's
in the slammer they won't be very happy.... well, you can more or less
guess what subsequently happens that soon causes John to be dodging
real bullets for the first time.
If you think you see a western in disguise here, you are
absolutely right. We have all the standard characters here, as you've
probably realized already; we have the sneering and smartass
modernization of "Black Bart" with Phillips' character, we have the untough
but honest and principled hero (John) who soon finds himself over his
head in trouble, and there is the old-time loner with the shady past
that is skilled with firearms (Gus) who ends up giving our hero a hand.
Of course, like in those old westerns, Gus lives in isolation from the
rest of the community and gives out hints of his law-breaking past,
though these hints are appropriately modernized such as when he says at
one point, "There is a reason why I live out here with no phone and no
mail box." As for the remaining characters of the community, you
probably correctly guessed that they are complete cowards who don't
want to get involved, and these yellow-bellies are lead by a man more
cowardly than they are, who foolishly thinks he can negotiate with
words with the (motorbike) riders. Of course, the only exception coming
from these townspeople being the spunky female squeeze of the hero, who
inevitably get kidnapped by the villain at one point. There are
numerous other western touches, such as the fact one of the mountains
near the town has an abandoned mine where the hero hides out at one
point. We've seen all these things before, but so what? In this context
it's fun, seeing how they've translated all this stuff in a modern
setting. It certainly gets silly at times, such as the sight of the
hell-raising bandits riding motorbikes past the 100+ year old buildings
of the park, but you can't help but smile a little.
In fact, one of the chief strengths of Lone
Hero is that it doesn't take itself completely seriously,
which is another big difference this movie has with the typical biker
movie. It wisely doesn't go all the way to the other end of the
spectrum and become a relentless gag-a-minute slapstick comedy, which
wouldn't have worked - biker movies are already straining for
credibility even before they begin. It's a subtle, almost hidden kind
of humor that's doubly pleasing, coming from the joy of its discovery
as well as the humor itself. The opening wild west shootout done for
the tourists is so cheesy and so pathetic, especially since none of its
participants seems to have a clue that they are humiliating themselves,
that it makes you laugh. Equally funny is when after the show, John's
boss takes him aside and tells him to play a bandit successfully it is
necessary for him to "visualize more," and then after the arrest pleads
with John to be willing to exploit the deed, explaining that among
other nearby small towns Profit is "getting killed in the battle of
ghost town supremacy." The humor has a similar dry tone through most of
the movie despite what may be happening; when Bart and his pals burn
down a church for kicks near the beginning, one of them observes that
maybe it's now time for them to leave Idaho. Still, the movie isn't
afraid to occasionally go for a real laugh-out-loud moment when it has
the opportunity; Bart's first appearance has him wearing nothing but a
yellow pair of boxers with a big happy face on them drawn in black ink.
After playing so many tough-guy roles with the utmost
of seriousness, it's nice to see Phillips loosen up to the point where
he's willing to have a little fun poked at him. His role as Bart also
gives him a chance to play something he's almost never done elsewhere
in his career - play a villain. What ironic about this is just from
this role alone, Phillips proves to be more convincing as a villain than any of
his heroic tough-guy roles. He doesn't play Bart as a sneering fearless
dumb thug, but one with a range of emotion (occasionally even giving
off flashes of fear on his face) as well as possessing a believable
amount of intelligence and logical thinking despite his totally
depraved attitude. Phillips may want to consider playing villains for
the remainder of his career, because he certainly has the stuff that's
needed to make a movie villain both threatening yet plausible. Another
actor in the movie who fits very comfortably in the role assigned to
him is Robert Forster. He allows himself to look grizzled and unkempt
(even revealing that he's thinning of hair on the top of his head), and
he wears his unmanaged appearance like a glove, albeit one that hasn't
seen a washing machine for some time. His voice and mannerism has that
weariness you associate with older people who have seen and done it
all, so you don't question his decision to get involved in such a
dangerous situation.
In fact, Forster is much more engaging than Flanery's
character. While I wouldn't exactly say Flanery gives a simply awful
performance, it's more like awfully bland and uninvolving. He simply
doesn't put any passion into his role, when this kind of movie needs
not necessarily a strong hero, but one who is strong in what he is
feeling and believes in. It doesn't help that the screenplay doesn't
quite make his character sympathetic enough; it's hard to feel sorry
for John when not only does he have a nice house (with a satellite
dish), but that his character can't think of a reason why he prefers to
stick around in such a miserable place when instead he could soon be on
a sunny beach with his girlfriend. This isn't the only place where the
writing lacks proper thought and detail. The whole thing about John's
relationship with his girlfriend and how she is planning to leave is
barely touched upon, so much so that you have to wonder why they even
bothered. She only seems to be in the movie so that the front of her
shirt can be ripped open, letting the audience see her bra in every
subsequent scene she appears in. There are also some big holes that
even the most indiscriminating viewer will see, like how on earth has
Bart managed to get away for so long with all the major crimes he keeps
committing, including the murder of a number of cops?
If I had been sufficiently distracted by key elements
in the movie, I might have considered such questions minor faults;
after all, this is a low-budget biker epic that would never win awards,
and is simply meant to entertain. I think we can all agree that the prime way a
movie like this is supposed to entertain us is through its action
sequences. And that's the main problem that Lone Hero has.
Not that there aren't any action sequences, but that all the action
sequences just don't deliver the goods. Like Flanery's performance,
they lack passion, and mostly come across as people simply standing a
few feet from each other and firing their guns. There's nothing very
creative about any of these action sequences - you'll recognize every
action sequence from some other movie, and I don't just mean the chase
sequence that was ripped off from Cobra. We have
the hero doing standard stuff like sneaking behind the villains and
saying "Drop it!", and the caught villains slowly move their hands to
the gun in their belt. The very low budget the movie obviously had
certainly had some factor in why the action is so unelaborate, also
explaining why machine-gun bullets seem to bounce off an old car and
leave just tiny dents. Possibly it also explains why we almost never
get to see any blood and bullet wounds during or after someone is shot,
even when the corpse we're shown had a full machine-gun clip emptied
into it seconds earlier. Whatever the causes may have been, they all
make the action come across with the same effect of people slowly
jogging through the wilderness. Pretty wilderness (the movie uses some
nice British Columbia locations), but there's a reason why TSN does not
showcase jogging.
The movie's lack of passion in areas where it really
counts makes it hard for me to recommend Lone Hero. Yet
at the same time I look back fondly on the many good things it
contains, and I find it equally hard to dismiss the movie. Though I
don't see the movie as something to actively seek out and rent, it just
may fit the need when it pops up on cable during a day you've set out
to be lazy, and there's no other exploitation on the other channels. At
the very least, the movie does have a lot of good about it to suggest
that genuinely good biker movies can be made. Let's hope next
time they get someone who not only has a sense of fun, but a sense of
excitement as well.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: The Annihilators,
The Peace Killers, Run, Angel, Run
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