Plot
Detective Ray Morgan accidentally kills the son of a mob boss. The mob boss orders to have Morgan killed unknowing that the assassin killed Morgan's wife and kids...
Release Year: 1998
Rating: 5.1/10 (279 voted)
Director:
Art Camacho
Stars: Gary Daniels, Gregory McKinney, Thomas Kopache
Storyline Detective Ray Morgan accidentally kills the son of a mob boss. The mob boss orders to have Morgan killed unknowing that the assassin killed Morgan's wife and kids. Now Morgan's out for revenge..and he'll do it his own way.
Writers: Art Camacho, Richard Preston Jr.
Cast: Gary Daniels
-
Det. Ray Morgan
Gregory McKinney
-
Det. Lucas Cassidy
(as Gregory A. McKinney)
Thomas Kopache
-
Captain Trent
(as Tom Kopache)
Billy Maddox
-
Mr. Brown
John Sanderford
-
Chief Det. Arnold 'Cat' Canton
Robin Curtis
-
Julie Sloan
Kelli McCarty
-
Tina Morgan
Maurice Lamont
-
Off. Alex Boorman
Richard Foronjy
-
Vincent Sloan
Michael Alaimo
-
Father Navarra
Christopher Boyer
-
Abercrombie
Vincent DePalma
-
Nicholas Sloan
(as Vince DePalma)
Griffin Drew
-
Hooker
Francis Fallon
-
Devon Sloan
Grady Hutt
-
Jeremy Morgan
Release Date: 5 March 1998
Filming Locations: 1010 S. Flower St, Los Angeles, California, USA
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Goofs:
Crew or equipment visible:
A wire is clearly visible when Gary Daniels is jumping away from the exploding white limousine.
User Review
Simple and somewhat typical plot, but a very good action movie overall.
Rating:
*Mild spoilers*
After Deadly Target, Rage and Riot, this is the fourth movie from PM
Entertainment to star Gary Daniels in the lead. While not as entertaining as
Rage or Deadly Target, or as good as other PM Entertainment productions such
as Executive Target and Last Man Standing, Recoil is nevertheless a very
solid action thriller with fantastic action scenes including several vehicle
chases, bloody shootouts and a couple of great fight scenes.
The plot is strictly by the numbers, and the movie plays out quite
strangely. For example, the first fifty minutes would lead you to believe it
will be a buddy cop movie in the mould of Lethal Weapon, but then the lead
characters family is killed, his partner killed and then it takes a turn as
a vigilante actioner for the last half hour. Despite this sudden turn, both
parts are played out well, the action scenes are solid and happen between
reasonable intervals, so at no point is the movie dull.
I noticed another reviewer made the comment "This movie is like a XXX movie
with all the nudity replaced by pointless fighting.". I would just like to
point out that this is entirely untrue, as there are no fight scenes till
after the story takes the vigilante turn which is over 50 minutes into it.
Although it stars Gary Daniels in the lead, this definitely can't be classed
as a martial arts thriller, as most of the action is made up of chases and
shootouts. Although it's credited as being directed by Art Camacho, it feels
like a Joseph Merhi/Richard Pepin production from every angle, from the
massive opening shootout leading to a chase, to the climatic chase scene
leading to a shootout. Fortunately all the action scenes work fantastically.
Tons of stuff blows up and looks good doing it, sparks fly, slow motion
isn't overused and in the few fight scenes that are there, Gary Daniels gets
to show off his skills and the choreography is excellent and there's tons of
crazy stunts in the PM tradition to top it all off. It's these kind of
things that I really miss in new big studio action movies, which nowadays
are full of CGI and overly large budgets.
Gary Daniels isn't bad in his role. Considering his background comes from
the kickboxing side of things first and acting second, it shouldn't surprise
too many people that he isn't a very good actor, but he makes a likeable
action hero and in this movie creates a lot of sympathy when his family are
killed and the chemistry between him, his family and his partner is good. I
instantly recognised Richard Foronjy as Tony Sarvo from Midnight Run, in
this playing the lead villain as Vincent Sloan. He looks believable as a
crime boss, but somehow came across a little too soft for the role. Robin
Curtis is a terrible actress and does nothing but sob and complain in the
role of Sloan's wife. Fortunately though, she doesn't have much
screentime.
Although there are better movies from Gary Daniels and PM Entertainment,
Recoil is a well paced and thoroughly entertaining action movie and if you
like this kind of stuff, it's definitely worth a go. Again it's a movie not
made to make us think, but to entertain and it definitely
satisfies.
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