Directed by:
Joseph ZitoScreenplay:
James BrunerCinematography:
João FernandesComposer:
Jay ChattawayCast:
Chuck Norris, M. Emmet Walsh, James Hong, Lenore Kasdorf, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Willie Williams, Erich Anderson, Sergio Kato, Pierrino Mascarino (more)VOD (1)
Plots(1)
Following a daring escape from a Vietnamese POW camp, Special Forces Colonel James Braddock (Norris) is on a mission to locate and save remaining MIAs. Aided by a beautiful State Department official (Lenore Kasdorf) and a former Army buddy (M. Emmet Walsh), Braddock amasses top secret information and state-of-the-art weaponry. Now this one-man army is prepared to blast his way into Vietnam but will he be able to blast his way back out? (official distributor synopsis)
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Reviews (2)
This famous movie, in which Chuck Norris emerges from the water with a machine gun in hand, is one I wanted to watch for the first time in years. It's no wonder that these types of movies are hard to come by nowadays, and over time, these cheap action films from Canon totally overshadowed Arnold and Sly. In fact, within a month, I watched two significant Chuck's films and I don't understand where his cult status actually came from. And I grew up on Walker Texas Ranger. ()
Chuck Norris’s first movie released by Cannon Films pushed his career in a completely unexpected direction. Suddenly, the C-list tough guy became a box-office star and, furthermore, the personification of conservative Republican values reflecting the political atmosphere of Reagan’s America. Cannon Films obviously launched the Missing in Action franchise to piggy-back on the success of the first Rambo flick, but the Stallone franchise was surprisingly surpassed when it came to the shift brought about by Rambo II. It is possible that Missing in Action also drew inspiration from the relatively successful Uncommon Valor released a year earlier, which was the first film to address the issue of American prisoners of war held in Vietnamese camps long after the war ended. On the ideological level, however, Missing in Action differs significantly from both of the aforementioned films. Though it is often overlooked, at its core Rambo II redresses the American defeat in Vietnam, but it does so in spite of the interests of politicians and commanders, just as the protagonists of Uncommon Valor act on their own despite the interests of politicians. Conversely Chuck’s hero does not stand in opposition to the official structures of the US. In Missing in Action, the liars are exclusively the Vietnamese leaders, who use the foreign liberal media for propaganda purposes. As a radical Republican, Chuck did not question his government’s line in the slightest. Accordingly, the film is a one-sided agit-prop pamphlet, which, in contrast to the escalating drama of Uncommon Valor and the superb action of Rambo II, offers only a second-rate action spectacle without any bold staging or choreography. ()
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Photo © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
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