One of the things I love most about Italian exploitation cinema is how little they try to disguise the fact that theyâre ripping something off. George Romeroâs seminal zombie classic, Dawn of the Dead, was released in Italy under the title Zombi. A totally unrelated film, directed by Lucio Fulci, was called Zombi 2 to capitalize on the formerâs success, despite the fact that the only thing thatâs the same in the two films is the presence of zombies. Itâs this kind of shamelessness that immediately drew me to Enzo G. Castellariâs 1982 film, 1990: The Bronx Warriors, a film that might get the gold medal for shoddy knockoffs. Clearly, Castellari and company had seen Walter Hillâs The Warriors in 1979 and John Carpenterâs Escape From New York in 1981 and said, âHey, these two movies are pretty cool; Letâs combine them! But instead of being good and exciting, letâs make our movie boring and with horrible dialogue. Thatâs the ticket!â And, by the Italian version of Jove, thatâs precisely what they did.
Enzo G. Castellari had made a bevy of low-budget action movies in the 70s, including the Peckinpah-inspired Western Keoma, and the Dirty Dozen-inspired The Inglorious Bastards, from which the Tarantino film gets its name and general concept. For this film, he decided to shoot in the actual Bronx, which offered some great scenery and some great traffic they couldn’t clear. He also had the balls to get the notorious biker gang the Hell’s Angels involved to perform some of the stunt work. Didn’t he see Gimme Shelter? It does pay off for him, though, as the stuff with the motorcycles is the best stuff in the movie. Sure, everything else is silly and makes no sense, but, boy, those motorcycle stunts sure do work well.
In the far-flung future of 1990, after some kind of vague apocalypse, the Bronx has turned into a No Manâs Land, a wretched hive of scum and villainy thatâs home to a slew of incongruous street gangs. The chief gang for this story is the Riders, who are known for playing canasta. Oh, sorry no, theyâre known for riding motorcycles. In the opening of the film, we see several Riders, lead by Trash (the bronzed and wooden Mark Gregory) beating seven bells out of some random other guys. They donât just fight them; no, they impale them on spikes and stuff. Trash then finds a pretty 17 year old girl named Ann (Stefania Girolami, the directorâs daughter), whom the other gang was brutalizing. She clearly does not belong in the Bronx, but does not want to leave. So, of course, Trash takes her with them.
This starts the somewhat convoluted plot: One of the Riders has been killed by Ogre (played by the great Fred Williamson), the King of the Bronx, because, apparently, he was wearing âa gizmo.â A gizmo is what they continually call a wristwatch that either is a communicator to the police in Manhattan or a tracker so they can find where the gangs are. At any rate, Ogre, leader of the Tigers (a group that doesnât ride tigers, but instead drive 1930s automobiles) as well as being the King, kills the guy and heads back to his lair. This has sort of foiled the plan of Ice, the Ridersâ resident âbrainyâ guy, and Hot Dog, a semi-truck driver, who were trying to get Trash and Ogre taken out so they could become the leaders.
As if THIS wasnât enough plot, thereâs also Annâs storyline, in which she is the daughter of the president of the obliquely named âManhattan Corporation,â and upon her 18th birthday, she will inherit the entire thing. She doesnât want to do this because the company is morally questionable and itâd break her little heart. She decides to stay with Trash as his âwoman.â This doesnât sit well with the Manhattan Corporation, of course, who hires policeman/sadistic psychopathic mercenary Hammer (Vic Morrow) to get her back, killing any and all gang members in the process. When Ann is kidnapped by the Zombies (a gang with face paint, roller skates, and hockey equipment⦠just like zombies), Trash must travel deep into the Bronx to get aid from Ogre to get her back. To do this, heâll have to cross through the territories of several other gangs, including one with sparkly hats and ballet moves. Hammer then gets the aid of Hot Dog and Ice to attempt to turn all the gangs against each other. It all ends in a massive gangs vs. gangs vs. cops showdown where nothing good happens.
Iâd like to point out; this is just what I think the plot is. Itâs very hard to tell. A lot of this comes from the script, which is laughably bad. If you’ve seen many Italian genre pictures, youâll know that a lot of the time they canât afford a really good translator who can turn a phrase. As a result, the English version of the script is often a literal translation of the Italian, and itâs safe to say the Italians donât have as much subtext. But, come on! A lot of the actors in this movie are actually American, and certainly all the people who dubbed the movie spoke English; why on Earth couldn’t someone have said, âHey, you know what? We donât really talk like this. Maybe we could change it a little bit?â But no. Instead we get lines like this from Ice: âSince heâs hooked up with that Manhattan pussy, all his blood has rushed to his cock.â There lacks a certain subtlety. My favorite of these, though, has to be a line in which Trash is chastising a fellow gang member for believing an obvious rouse: âYou fuck! It could just be a pile of shit out of someone’s asshole!â Itâs like Shakespeare, isn’t it?
This, sadly, was actor Vic Morrowâs final completed film before his tragic death during the making of Twilight Zone: The Movie. Heâd been in nearly 100 film and television projects, some great, some less than great, but this movie might be his crowning achievement. Well, âcrowningâ in that heâs the king of hammy overacting. He, of all people, should have fought harder for better lines. The end of the film sees Hammer and a cadre of riot police on horseback, machine gunning and flame-throwing anybody who happens to be in the vicinity. During all this carnage, Hammer stands on another floor, looking down and laughing uncontrollably, all the while yelling, âIâm Hammer! HAHAHA! Iâm HAMMER!!!â Itâs totally from nowhere. Up until this point, heâd been sort of a cool customer, but start killing people en masse and heâs a raving lunatic.
(Editor’s Note: How is Fred Williamson not “The Hammer” in this thing? That’s his nickname for real!)
1990: The Bronx Warriors is a movie that cannot help but make you laugh with its charming ineptitude. At one point there is an actual motorcycle wipeout during a fairly routine-looking riding scene. Instead of seeing if the guy was okay, going back to one, and starting again, Castellari kept the shot in the film and reworked the plot accordingly. Thatâs a free stunt! Sure, it looks like the guy killed himself face-planting on the pavement, but anything for art, right? The characters take leaps of logic that seem to come from nowhere, the alliances are tenuous one minute, then firm the next, and every utterance has zero motivation. Itâs truly a wonderfully crappy movie. But, it must have done well because a sequel was made called Escape From the Bronx. I wonder where that title came from.
P.S.
Obviously the Italian Filmmakers will milk a film franchise to death (after all, Hollywood’s been doing that shit for decades and still does it today via shitty remakes!); so it didn’t surprise me that 1990: THE BRONX WARRIORS (1982) aka 1990: I Guerrieri Del Bronx) was quickly followed by THE BRONX WARRIORS 2: ESCAPE FROM THE BRONX (1984) aka Fuga Dal Bronx) …
Shit, director Enzo G. Castellari didn’t hesitate to direct and release THE NEW BARBARIANS (1983) aka I Nuovi Barbari / Warriors of the Wasteland) using some of cast from the 1st Bronx Warrior film (these Italian Filmmakers never wasted sets, props, or the use of available actors – they did exactly what Roger Corman has done since the late 50’s). Enzo’s no slouch, he even got Lou Ferrigno to star in SINDBAD OF THE SEVEN SEAS (1989) ….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF1vvUDo_EE
Never underestimate the Italian Movie Makers! The in-joke is they will exploit any & every box office hit from all genres – then add tits to it to disguise the fact there is no fucking plot!
The proof is that almost all of the “Weird Sci Fi” have been the cult classic low budget Italian Genre Movies we all love (why? because they’re so bad!). 1990 THE BRONX WARRIOR liberally borrows from THE WARRIORS (1979), MAD MAX (1979) and ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK (1981) ….
Out of all the post-apocalyptic low budget cult classics (the 80’s was littered with them – and some were even delivered in 3-D!); my favorite remains SHE (1982 – Continental Motion Pictures, Royal Films B.V., Trans World Entertainment (TWE); where Sandahl Bergman (she still looks hot! she still gives me a hard-on!) joins up with fellow future warriors to battle against a tutu wearing giant, a psychic communist, some toga wearing werewolves, various mutants bandaged up like Egyptian mummies (etc, etc – yeah this is one fucking awesome low budget movie!) ….
A fucking damn shame that its not on DVD / Bluray (oh well, you’ll have to torrent it ’til someone gives it a nice remastering for release on disc) –
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYD2WBfsCCI
Oh man, it’s Trash! It’s the prequel of Escape 2000, of MST3K infamy!