| Essentially a retelling of Clint
Eastwood’s Pale Rider, which is a second-rate rehash
of George Stevens’ Shane, Dolph Lundgren’s Missionary
Man simply doesn’t have enough original elements to
separate it from the rest of the direct-to-DVD fare. Some
scenes work, especially those in which the hulking main character
Ryder (who remains nameless in the film) wipes the floors
with villains, but overall a lack of unique action scenes
and noteworthy storytelling prevent Missionary Man from being
even slightly memorable.
A mysterious man-with-no-name (Dolph Lundgren), who drinks
tequila and reads from a tattered bible, rumbles into town
on his old-fashioned motorcycle to attend the funeral of J.J.,
a friend who recently died by drowning. J.J.’s family
won’t accept his death as an accident, and blame the
local oppressor Reno, a vicious man who rules the town by
fear and plots to build a casino on the neighboring reservation
to fuel his drug smuggling business. The tall, blonde-haired
mystery man quickly causes problems for Reno when he begins
to assault hired hands and interfere with Reno’s underhanded
practices. Soon he finds himself the target of Jarfe (John
Enos III) and his murderous motorcycle gang, a motley mob
of miscreants out to end the disruption of their partner’s
plotting – but a powerful wrath of vengeance fuels the
steely-eyed stranger and no sin shall go unpunished.
“No sin shall go unpunished” is also the tagline
for the film, but oddly enough there are plenty of sins that
go unrecompensed – and they all belong to Ryder. An
anti-hero vigilante who goes above and beyond murdering for
vengeance, Ryder exhibits no emotions as he blows people away
with his sawed-off shotgun. What makes his actions even more
controversial is the fact that he reads from a bible and imparts
the idea that what he does is somehow in league with God.
Knocking back shots of tequila nonstop also makes for an interesting
contrast in a character that is supposedly “doing the
right thing.”
We root for Ryder just the same anyway since, in these generic
action films, thinking is not required, and stunts, action
and ass-kicking are the highlights of the story. Sadly, Lundgren
chooses not to do all that many stunts or even participate
in all that many fight sequences. Quick and fancy camera edits
make the brawls appear more dramatic than they really are,
but when the climax involves simply shooting baddies with
a gun, it seems a misuse of Lundgren’s well-known martial
arts talents.
Channeling The Terminator, Dolph speaks few words and constantly
sports shades, and mimicking Clint Eastwood’s famous
man-with-no-name, (especially the similar role from Pale Rider)
he sweeps into town with vengeance on his mind, even though
it isn’t alluded to from the outset. With terribly cliché
events, notably mediocre dialogue that sounds recycled from
other cheesy action flicks, and slow-motion shots all in the
wrong spots (such as before and after a fight scene, instead
of in the midst of action), Missionary Man doesn’t ever
break away from the idea that it is reusing the exact same
aspects that were appealing about other films. The problem
is when a film copies a remake that was already vastly inferior
to the original (see Shane) it has no hopes of bringing anything
new to the table. And indeed, while the best bits are when
Ryder throws out snappy one-liners to random rogues before
he brutally executes them, there really is nothing new to
be found in Missionary Man.
- Mike Massie
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