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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Renny Harlin's strange take on the Cold War, May 6, 2007
BORN AMERICAN (1986)
directed by Renny Harlin
approx. 95 minutes
Three young American tourists cross the border from Finland to the USSR as part of a "thrill seeking" vacation. Chaos ensues, with the Americans becoming involved in an ultraviolent village brawl and eventually getting incarcerated. Along the way they encounter various strangers that may or may not be able to help them escape.
There are a lot of problems with this movie, I guess if I had to pick one it would be that the only plot device Renny Harlin seems to utilize to move the story along is his trademark violence. This is a shame because the more "restrained" scenes (such as the beginning where the Americans are evading the border guards) are pretty suspenseful and could've been a part of a great drama. Another problem is that many characters become interchangeable at some point. For example, one of the Americans falls for a girl. A second girl has the unfortunate task of telling him that his love interest has been killed, but he seems to fall for her in a matter of seconds! On top of this, the characters themselves are so rude and impulsive that when they show any other kind of emotions it must be the for first time in their life.
The most ridiculous scene is the one where we discover that prisoners are entered into a deadly "human chess game" where inmates go head to head in a dim room on a life size checkerboard*. The horrors of the gulag system are not something that have to be fabricated, especially in such a theatrical way! Perhaps worst of all is that this movie missed an opportunity to show American audiences a European perspective on the Soviet system. The movie ends with a last minute criticism of Cold War policy that states that the CIA and KGB are deliberately prolonging the war to consolidate power for themselves.
Finnish director Renny Harlin is best known for big budget action movies such as 'DIE HARD 2' and 'CLIFFHANGER'.
*- this movie was released 2 years before the computer game 'BATTLE CHESS', but after Michael Crichton's 'FUTUREWORLD' which has a similar scene!
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very intense and provocative, January 14, 2004
Your milage may vary; but I found this movie white-knuckle intense and extremely provocative. There is little danger of giving away the plot; it is not particularly complex. Three stupid, arrogant American teenagers tempt fate by crossing an unguarded gate from Finland to the former USSR, which at the time was very much the USSR and a Very Bad Place for Americans. They make photographs of themselves on the wrong side of the gate. So far so good, but then they get lost and go the wrong way right into the hands of the Russians who mistake them for spies. Some interesting subplots are also happening that keep things moving, that I'll keep a secret for ya. I can promise you one thing: If you are American, after seeing this, you'll salute the flag, think real hard before traveling overseas and I'll bet you never photograph yourself on the wrong side of an international border!
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Back from the U.S.S.R., June 25, 2009
BORN AMERICAN opens with a young girl fleeing in the snow from a heavy-set middle-aged man who seems intent on harming her.
Next, we see three American college students on a fun vacation in Finland. They rent a jalopy and drive north toward the Arctic Circle, guzzling beer the whole way. After an outdoor "rest stop," a boy with the unlikely name of Savoy Brown (the son of Chuck Norris) stupidly suggests they cross the Russian border on foot and at night.
They're armed with rifles and a hunting bow. The weakest of them, K.C. (Coburn) carries an SLR camera with a telephoto lens. It's no surprise then that Soviet border guards believe these quickly-detected intruders to be agent provocateurs.
The boys flee to a tiny village where they're captured by locals and dragged to the open casket funeral of the girl we've previously seen running. The Orthodox priest performing her ceremony is the man who apparently pursued, caught and murdered this unfortunate, yet the angry townspeople believe the three Americans are responsible!
Trigger-happy soldiers arrive; total chaos ensues: explosions, fire, soldiers killed, the targets captured. After being brought to a gulag, the frightened K.C. and Savoy agree with a mean-looking interrogator's charge that they are spies. The more belligerant Mitch (Durham) shows open contempt and he's brutally tortured with electric shocks delivered through alligator clips attached to his nipples.
Uncooperative Mitch is sent to the prison's underbelly; he's brainwashed and used as a human chess piece in a game where the losers die. Savoy and K.C. are placed in a cell; their clothes and possessions stolen by other inmates. The story becomes one of survival under the worst of conditions and eventual escape. Not all of them would make it out alive.
Related item:
MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (1978) is the true story of an American arrested in Turkey for hashish smuggling and imprisoned for life in an absolute hellhole.
Parenthetical number preceding title is a 1 to 10 viewer poll rating found at a film resource website.
(4.6) Born American (USA/Finland-1986) - Mike Norris/Steve Durham/David Coburn/Thalmus Rasulala/Albert Salmi
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