Invasion USA (1985)

£0.00


Country: US
Technical: col 107m
Director: Joseph Zito
Cast: Chuck Norris, Richard Lynch

Synopsis:

A Soviet amphibian invasion of Florida, whose sole objective seems to be to wipe out Chuck Norris, provokes the kind of police/military response parodied so well in The Blues Brothers.

Review:

Chuck eventually makes the chief villain's worst dream come true, and gets some good lines along the way. This is cynical, commercialized violence at its 80s nadir, with one scene after another an excuse for some manner of wanton destruction, as any pretence at plot logic is casually pushed aside. Devised by Golam and Globus of Cannon as a response to Steven Seagal and Arnie, the results are farcical, not just for Norris's evident immunity to even the most superficial of scratches, but also for the unlimited supply of ammo he holds in his magazines.

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Country: US
Technical: col 107m
Director: Joseph Zito
Cast: Chuck Norris, Richard Lynch

Synopsis:

A Soviet amphibian invasion of Florida, whose sole objective seems to be to wipe out Chuck Norris, provokes the kind of police/military response parodied so well in The Blues Brothers.

Review:

Chuck eventually makes the chief villain's worst dream come true, and gets some good lines along the way. This is cynical, commercialized violence at its 80s nadir, with one scene after another an excuse for some manner of wanton destruction, as any pretence at plot logic is casually pushed aside. Devised by Golam and Globus of Cannon as a response to Steven Seagal and Arnie, the results are farcical, not just for Norris's evident immunity to even the most superficial of scratches, but also for the unlimited supply of ammo he holds in his magazines.


Country: US
Technical: col 107m
Director: Joseph Zito
Cast: Chuck Norris, Richard Lynch

Synopsis:

A Soviet amphibian invasion of Florida, whose sole objective seems to be to wipe out Chuck Norris, provokes the kind of police/military response parodied so well in The Blues Brothers.

Review:

Chuck eventually makes the chief villain's worst dream come true, and gets some good lines along the way. This is cynical, commercialized violence at its 80s nadir, with one scene after another an excuse for some manner of wanton destruction, as any pretence at plot logic is casually pushed aside. Devised by Golam and Globus of Cannon as a response to Steven Seagal and Arnie, the results are farcical, not just for Norris's evident immunity to even the most superficial of scratches, but also for the unlimited supply of ammo he holds in his magazines.