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Karate Cop [Slim Case]

Ron Marchini , David Carradine  |  Unrated |  DVD
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Actors: Ron Marchini, David Carradine
  • Format: Color, NTSC, Full Screen
  • Language: English
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rated: Unrated
  • Studio: Digiview Entertainment
  • DVD Release Date: June 6, 2006
  • Run Time: 90 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000NKSGWG
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #34,293 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best of the worst., July 25, 2008
By 
John Martel (Fayetteville, AR) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Karate Cop [Slim Case] (DVD)
Ok, so if you have a twisted sense of humor, like maybe you love to watch train wrecks or fat kids try to jump hurdles, you'll get a kick out of this flick. This is one of the funniest things I've ever seen. People tend to think I like bad movies, that's actually not true. The companion movie to this one, Omega Cop, (a prequel I assume)is not funny at all. In fact it's incredibly boring.

Karate Cop however is a champ.

The first thing you will notice is that people's names keep repeating in the opening credits, just their jobs change. This movie stars many of the same people as Omega Cop, but switches the roles up. Ronald L. Marchini is once again "John Travis" fighting as the last member of the "special police" left alive in a world full of mad max style gangs. It's full of ridiculous chracters, really horrible script writing, impossible action sequences, and oh yeah, David Carradine makes a cameo as the owner of a Honkey Tonk bar serving stupid huge bowls of "Rabbit Stew".

One of the funniest things about this flick is the soundtrack, it's all homemade and really really bad. But not like bad synthesizer music, well there's a lil of that too. It's like a few people got drunk, went out to the garage and wrote some songs for Marchini to kick butt to. But you have to understand why this movie is funny. It's funny because everyone involved is completely serious and absolutely trying their complete level best to make a good feature. And it's so freakin horrible!! That's what's funny, think William Hung, American Idol. This thing is also loaded with 80's style awesome one liners.

Plot premise- For those that care,

The story takes place at some undifined point in the future where gangs rule the earth and chase women all over the place trying to capture them as slaves. Enter John Travis (Marchini) and his dog. Travis is the last cop alive and enters the movie by rescuing "Rachel" from one of the gangs. In her gratitude she offers Travis a "hot meal." On the way to her place, of course, they are attacked by a gang of leperous bums with shopping cart bombs, broken pallets, and a lisping leader with a whip named "Snake." It grows from there. Eventually he has to fight everybody and save the girl and what not, and of course collect crystals from religous nuts who are into human sacrifice to repair a teleporter to save a kabillion kids or some kakamanie crap. But of course the bad guys want the crystals too so they can transport drugs.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars "Nothing works anymore.", March 1, 2011
This review is from: Karate Cop [Slim Case] (DVD)
Before settling in to what I hoped would be an enjoyable - if mindless - action movie, I had no idea that KARATE COP was actually the sequel to OMEGA COP. There are no words to describe the feeling of pure joy I experienced when Ron Marchini entered his first scene wearing the same "Special Police" cap he spent five minutes of screen-time chasing during the earlier film.

Unfortunately, while the film does retain Ron Marchini's John Travis character and John Travis' hat, it does not retain Adam West, which is excusable given that he blew himself up with a grenade at the end of the last movie. This lack of camp value is something that would negatively impact the film.

When we last saw Travis, he was swimming in the clean waters of Montana with three post-apocalyptic babes. He had found a oasis of hope in a future gone mad. However, as this film opens, he has gone back to his old profession of beating up random derelicts and troublemakers in the name of enforcing a system of laws that have long since been ignored by the remaining members of society. His opening scene involves him and his dog rescuing a woman who looks and is shaped a lot like Rachel Lee Cook (fortunately for my brain, she is in fact named Rachel).

Rachel is played by a young actress named Carrie Chambers. The two most prominent credits in her IMDB profile are as "Chairwoman" in THE BIKINI CARWASH COMPANY II (yes, they made a sequel - a nation demanded it) and as Kelly Preston's body double in LOVE IS A GUN. I'll leave it to the reader to speculate on what caused her to be cast in this film.

Rachel invites Travis back to her base and promises him a hot meal. At the good guys' headquarters, Travis meets the "Freebies" - a bunch of strategically dirtied young orphans who fancy themselves as freedom fighters. Here, Rachel introduces the film's very poorly executed McGuffin: the Star Trek-like teleporter.

The Freebies HQ contains a broken teleporter and all it requires is a replacement crystal. This teleporter would allow the orphans to escape to greener pastures as long as those greener pastures also contain a functioning teleporter. In what was presumably a neat cost-cutting move, the audience is never actually shown what is on the destination end, so we take it on faith that they would actually be in a better place. The most plausible thing about the teleporter it is controlled via a battered and ink-stained Commodore Vic-20 (the movie was made in 1991, and the Vic-20 was obsolete even then).

Travis decides to help and leaving his dog behind (the dog disappears until the end of the film), sets off on a motorcycle to find and return the crystal.

KARATE COP is a hard movie to like; it's an even harder movie to stay awake through. When I watch a bad movie at home, I'll find my attention beginning to wander. I'll wonder if perhaps there isn't a more interesting 29 inches of space somewhere in the living room I could be directing my eyes towards instead of the TV. In this case, my eyes felt that a more entertaining sight would be to look directly at the inside of my eye-lids. It's an awful cliché to say that a film is a cure for insomnia, but in my two viewings I found it incredibly difficult to stay conscious both times.

Ron Marchini is a sort of poor man's Chuck Norris. He spends most of his screen-time kickboxing a seemingly limitless number of masked or hooded bandits. The fight scenes drag on and on and on. It's a relief to get to the end of one, even though you know that the end of such a sequence inevitably results in a humorless and banal would-be catch-phrase, delivered in a dull, flat monotone.

Like OMEGA COP, this future is populated by roaming bands of dirty deviants with nothing better to do all day than stand around holding crowbars, planks of wood and metal bars, waiting for a stranger to pass by so they can chase him. Unlike the previous film, in this version of the future, no one has a nice coat, just wife-beaters, stained flannel shirts and dirty collared shirts with parallel slashes in them.

The slave trade from the previous film has been replaced with an illegal drug trade (although no one in the movie is seen using, buying or selling drugs). The film's main bad guy is called Supreme Commander Lincoln, a tubby guy with a handle-bar mustache and bleached blond hair. He spends most of his time in a gladiator-style fighting area watching extras covered in filth unsuccessfully attempt to defeat his champion.

SCL's main henchman is an overactor named Snaker. He's a gang leader with a strangely deformed face, long stringy hair and a noticeable bald spot. Snaker constantly refers to himself in the third person in a serious of loud, oddly phrased shouts. It isn't much, but his gang does contribute something new to film lore. While other movies have often shown individuals hurling Molotov Cocktails, this is my introduction to a Moltov Shopping Cart. Well played, Snaker.

One should also note that while David Carradine enjoys a prominent position on the DVD cover and on the cast list, he's basically here in an extended cameo. His five minutes are as the manager of a greasy spoon diner called Jackass Junction... specializing in rabbit stew and clean water. Strangely enough given their mutual background, Carradine and Marchini do not have a kickboxing fight. Why bring David Carradine into a martial arts movie and not have him perform martial arts?

John Travis' greatest talent is choosing enemies who scream at the top of their lungs when charging at him from behind and blow any element of surprise they might have had. If they didn't do that, then they'd save themselves the trouble of many, many minutes of unendurable kickboxing sequences. The movie would be better paced, and it would be tremendously shorter.
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