Summary Capsule
Mutant Meter
Movie Store [proceeds go toward monthly MRFH upkeep]
Out of all of these early 90's video game translations, Street Fighter gained a majority share of the shame due to its B-list star-studded cast (this was back when Jean-Claude Van Damme had fans instead of sympathizers) and its cheery love of nonsense. I haven't given it a lot of thought, how difficult it might be to take a fighting game with no plot or story whatsoever - just wacky character backgrounds and enthusiastic one-liners - and try to fashion a movie that would be anything other than the film equivalent of a mystery casserole. Still, I've spent many a restless night struggling with the decision they came to in Street Fighter: that the best way to serve up a heapin' hot dish of kung fu love would be to center the story around the faux-U.N.'s battle against a petty warlord in Vietnam. Okay, so it's the "A.N." (Allied Nations) and "Shadaloo" (which is shown on a map to be the same exact area), but still, how does a humanitarian peacekeeping mission make for a good staging ground for bloody fisticuffs? By torturing the plot into weak-willed submission, that's how. Van Damme is Col. Guile, leader of a 200-person army and a freedom war that's somehow deserving of numerous news broadcasts and Time magazine covers. Raul Julia is M. Bison, a leather-loving dictator who is possibly the most self-deluded bad guy to ever grace the screen (his eye-bulging pronouncements were only recently topped by Jeremy Irons in Dungeons & Dragons). The other Street Fighter 2 characters come in as either good or bad guys, all with their "thing" and an extreme aversion to using firearms when a roundhouse kick could substitute. Yes, Street Fighter is one of those stormtrooper flicks where only the faceless bad guys are ever shot and killed, where bullets veer wildly off their paths from the good guys to lodge into a metallic console, and where a puny pistol is far more deadly and accurate than a fully automatic AK-47. With teenage boys its target, this movie works overtime to make the money shots and Cheer Scenes pop out at a regular one-per-five-minutes. A Cheer Scene, in my encyclopedia, is a moment in a movie where a character does or says something so awesomely perfect that you're supposed to get goosebumps and raise your fist and go "Oh yeah!" Like when a bad guy all but has Luke targeted in his sights, and the Millenium Falcon swoops down, or when Bill Pullman orates the least-intelligent 4th of July speech ever. Michael Bay has never met a Cheer Scene he didn't like, by the way. By the end, all of the characters get to have their one big fight against their union equivalent. However, you really can't pit Jean-Claude Van Damme against Raul Julia in a fist fight without using a bulk supply of stunt doubles and not-so-clever editing cuts. Even so, it's a snuff film where you genuinely feel bad for the scenery-chewing Julia and hiss in disgust at Van Damme's muscle-bound moron beating up a senior citizen. Nitpicking this movie would require a dedicated research team from a prestigious university, and MRFH doesn't have that sort of money. What we can deliver to you is BISON'S TOP SECRET MASTER PLAN, mostly unaltered from how it appears in the movie, as a taste for the psychedelic logic within: 1. Start a land war in a small, insignificant Asian nation. Because that worked so well for Vietnam. 2. Once the freedom-loving nations of the world ally against you and start throwing Van Dammes your way, it's time to prematurely declare victory. 3. Build your evil fortress in some not-too-conspicuous ruins - probably on some tourist tour path where swarms of schoolchildren tromp through daily - and deck it out with loads of TV monitors, skull/spine chandeliers, hovering throne-discs, and kidnapped scientists. 4. Hit yourself in the forehead once you realize that ruins rarely are built near modern electrical routes. Light a bunch of candles and order up some generators. 5. Plan on building a great city called Bisonopolis once the war is won, and make it in the shape of a skull. Assume that many popular food franchises will want to set up shop in the food court. 6. Start printing your own purple money with your face on it and pay military associates with it. When they balk, claim that it will soon be worth five times the rate of the British pound, because you're planning on kidnapping their queen. It's vital you say this with a straight face. 7. Not only tamper in God's domain by genetically mutating people into super-soldiers, but do so on kidnapped good guys who will of course NEVER have a reason to turn their newfound strength against you. 8. Expect to fight the enemy commander mano-a-mano on the battlefield. Just like Eisenhower and Hitler's great dukefest of '45. Then somehow harness electricity and powers of flight by being electrocuted.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Despite negative reviews the movie did make a profit. It grossed $33 million domestically and $66 million worldwide, earning almost triple its production budget of $35 million. Groovy Quotes
Bison: For you, the day Bison graced your village was the most important day of your life. But for me... it was Tuesday. Bison: The temple above us was the wonder of the ancient world. Bisonopolis shall be the wonder of my world. But I think the food court should be larger. All the big franchises will want in.
A.N. Official: Colonel, have you lost your mind?
If you liked this movie, try these:
Comment On This Review Page In Our Feedback Forum! This review page was last updated on 11.16.07 MRFH Home . Reviews . Findaflik . Features! . MRFH Forum © 2007 Mutant Reviewers From Hell (Original Content). All Rights Reserved. |