I dig car chase movies and who doesn’t love a great heist flick, the
Fast & Furious movies certainly prove that these are two great tastes that taste great together.
So when you have a film starring Tommy Lee Jones, Linda Hamilton and
deals with a prototype super car that they have to steal back from the
villainous Robert Vaughn, well that’s the kind of movie I just have to
watch. Directed by
Harley Cokeliss from a story and screenplay by
John Carpenter Black Moon Rising is 80s action at its coolest.
The plot follows the adventures of Quint (
Tommy Lee Jones),
a professional thief who is adept at breaking into even the most secure
buildings. Now it seems the government has exhausted all legal
procedures to get evidence against a Las Vegas corporation so they turn
to Quint to break in and retrieve crucial tax information for their
Grand Jury investigation.
I
f I was then I would have called Tron.
Quint has no problem getting in and finding the needed data tape but on the way out he encounters a rival thief Marvin Ringer (
Lee Ving),
who is currently working for the crooked company. While escaping
amongst a hail of machine gun bullets Quint’s car is severely damaged
and he is forced to hide the tape under the license plate of a vehicle
that had been towed into a gas station. The car in question is the Black
Moon, a 300-MPH prototype vehicle made of Kevlar which is hydrogen
powered. This supercar was designed by Earl Windom (
Richard Jaeckel), built by deaf mechanic Tyke Thaedon (
William Sanderson), and driven by Billy Lyons (
Dan Shor).
The Black Moon.
Windom and company take the Black Moon to an upscale Hollywood
restaurant to show a potential investor while Quint had followed them
there, but before he has a chance to retrieve the hidden tape a group of
professional car thieves led by Nina (
Linda Hamilton) steal
all the high end cars in the restaurant parking lot including the Black
Moon. Quint is unable to keep up with Nina, who is driving the stolen
super car, but he is able to track down where she went. The car theft
ring is run by Ed Ryland (
Robert Vaughn) who operates his criminal enterprises from a secret basement level under his twin tower business complex.
Somewhere in there Gus Gorman is designing a super computer.
There is a bit of a time crunch as Agent Johnson (
Bubba Smith)
tells Quint that if he doesn’t get them the tape in three days he will
transfer all the heat he gets from his superiors to Quint’s body. With
Marvin and his goons hot on his trail, as well as Ryland insane security
system now in the mix, the chances of success are very slim indeed. The
only help he’s got comes from the previous owners of the Black Moon who
would really like their “
one of a kind” car back and invaluable information from Iron John (
Keenan Wynn)
a construction foreman who helped build the towers . With pressure
coming on all sides Quint takes solace in the fact that he may be able
to get an “inside man” if his powers of seduction can work.
And seriously, what woman could resist that?
It’s here that the movie goes into full on heist mode as they track
down blueprints to Ryland’s building, find the man who helped install
some of the security methods, and then train themselves for the big
night. Everything will have to go like clockwork.
“This place will be tougher to break into than the Nakatomi Plaza.”
Black Moon Rising has it all, an amazing cast
littered with great character actors, a fantastically cool car of the
future, all the great heist moments one expects in a film of this type;
cutting alarm feeds, beams splitters screwing up cameras, recording and
looping security said footage, a grappling gun launched cable from one
building to another to allow Quint access, crawling through ductwork,
and blowing the shit out of stuff. When Quint and Nina finally team-up
we are treated to a harried chase through the villain’s lair until they
make their final daring break.
Out the windows of one building.
Through the air with the greatest of ease to the other one.
They land safely in the other tower… well, not too safe as Marvin and
his thugs are waiting, but Quint is through fucking around and beats
the living crap out of all of them. Agent Johnson shows up to get the
tape and Quint gets paid so that he and Nina can now retire and spend
some more quality time together.
“Did I just father the savior of our future?”
Much of this film rests solely on the charismatic shoulders of Tommy
Lee Jones; the MacGuffin tape is a very thinly veiled plot device and
the reason for Quint hiding it in the Black Moon made little to no sense
but was simply required to get the story moving. Little faults aside if
you are a fan of 80s action films you won’t be disappointed in
Black Moon Rising.
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