Firing Line (1991)
Facts
| Directed by | John Gale |
| Cast | Shannon Tweed; Reb Brown; Kahlena Marie |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1990 |
| DVD Release | March 3, 2003 |
| Running Time | 91 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 090328300746 |
| Buy this item | $14.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 3 1:20 EST (details) 1 DVD, Miracle Pictures, Usually ships in 24 hours, NTSC Languages: English (Unknown) Or 30 new from $0.25, 6 used from $0.99 |
About Firing Line
From back cover, "The Central American government hires a mercenary rebel-buster to squash insurgents. Everything is going great, until he determines that he agrees with the rebel cause, and in fact, begins to train them to fight the government. At this point, he has to run for his life, along with a very provocative, although innocent woman." Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Like The A-Team, Only Without The Talent Or Production Values |
The film starts by showing Reb Brown picking up Shannon Tweed in a bar. It turns out she's there on business selling "sports equipment" to hotels. (Ponder.) The two of them hit it off, but before long Brown is in trouble, and Tweed gets kidnapped in an attempt to find out information about Brown. The next 80 or so minutes are filled with implausible escapes, lots of gunfire, helicopters, explosions, and Reb Brown yelling "Move!" in the same manner he perfected in the infinitely better (though more comical) "Space Mutiny." Shannon Tweed's assets are largely squandered here, although she does turn in the best performance, and has plenty of time for a relatively immodest swim in the middle of a combat zone. Saying she gives the best performance here should not be confused with an endorsement, however: the scene where she stares slack-jawed at a dead body for several minutes in horror is overwrought enough with pathos to make any reasonable viewer's eyes roll back in their head. For sheer discomfort, watch carefully for the scene in which smarmy Reb and disinterested Shannon run off on a romantic interlude under a waterfall during hostilities.
The film has terrible production values, and makes the most of the limited footage they had of helicopters, things blowing up, and people falling down dead. Despite this, the film manages to be abjectly boring. Making it worse is the fact that the soundtrack sounds awful, there are large audio dropouts, and the sound effects frequently don't match the onscreen action. The music is equally annoying, consisting as it does of nearly constant trumpet and drum military fanfare refrains of low quality. After all the running, all the fighting, all the endlessly repeated helicopter footage, the obligatory stuntman on fire for some reason, and Reb Brown yelling "Move!" more times than I want to think about, the movie comes to an abrupt, unfulfilling train-wreck of an ending, which, while welcome, seemed like the filmmakers had simply run out of ideas and money.
"Firing Line" is in every way a terrible movie. It has no redeeming qualities: it is too awful to be entertaining, and too boring to be funny. Just say no. October 11, 2008
| Don't bother |
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