Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMax Havoc is a sports photographer. He is in Guam on a job when he meets the beautiful Goody sisters - Jane and Christy. He and Jane hit it off but the pleasantness ends when the sisters bec... Tout lireMax Havoc is a sports photographer. He is in Guam on a job when he meets the beautiful Goody sisters - Jane and Christy. He and Jane hit it off but the pleasantness ends when the sisters become a target for a Yakuza gang after they take their rare, sacred jade dragon. He ends up ... Tout lireMax Havoc is a sports photographer. He is in Guam on a job when he meets the beautiful Goody sisters - Jane and Christy. He and Jane hit it off but the pleasantness ends when the sisters become a target for a Yakuza gang after they take their rare, sacred jade dragon. He ends up in the middle of a fight for survival.
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
- Quicksilver
- (as Johnny Nguyen)
- L.J.
- (as Jamie Spears)
Avis en vedette
What a really bad movie. It made little sense to me and was a waste of time. I watched it on TV here so I couldn't fast forward it!
Some of my friends were in it as extras, so I guess it was cool seeing them, but the shot they were in was out-of-focus, so even that was worthless. My friends were angry. I guess they waited for hours and hours and never got paid.
The only place this movie is ever gonna play is in the your local car-wash bin for $1.99. It's not even worth that!
This is one of those films you sort of stumble upon at the video store, and everything else good or halfway good is already checked out, so you give it a shot, knowing full well the film is going to suck. But just how bad MAX HAVOC sucks may shock you: It's dull, boring, tiresome, listless, etc, etc. You get the idea.
Someone on one of these reviews here compares MAX HAVOC to an episode of MANGNUM P.I., except MANGNUM P.I. is at lest a competent product. MAX HAVOC is wretchedly bad. It's the kind of bad-film in which you wonder while watching it: "How do films like this get made?" A very good question.
MAX HAVOC was made by consistently bad film maker Albert Pyun. You wonder why anyone would knowingly hire this hack. The film is full of stock footage, bad acting, the list can go on forever.
There is currently some kinda controversy over the financing of the film. The island of Guam put up the money for this film (who can say why. I guess they have never seen an Albert Pyun film because that's exactly what they got: An Albert Pyun incompetent sh*t film.)
Folks, if you're a film investor and you see the name Albert Pyun attached to the film some slimy film producer is asking you to invest in, be afraid. Be very afraid.
If this film were an animal it would be taken out back and shot and put out of it's misery. If you're unfortunate enough to have to endure this dung-heap DVD, you may wish someone would shoot you and put you out of your misery.
MAX HAVOC: CURSE OF THE DRAGON is maximum incompetencey, maximum tedium, and maximum thievery.
Pyun goes back to the late 80's and early 90's with this movie, the days when he directed wooden martial artists like Jean Claude Van Damme, Olivier Gruner and Sasha Mitchell.
This movie revolves around a former kick-boxing champ turned sports photographer, and his peculiar ability to run into trouble wherever he goes. Funny enough, his name is Max Havoc. Mr. Havoc is sent to Guam for an easy job and to relax. BUt he runs into, first, with two troublesome teen sisters, one smart and one brain-dead (guess for which he fell?), and then with an entire Japanese organization, who's after a stolen jade dragon.
The lead is the Swiss nobody Mickey Hardt. He has the charisma of an amoeba, and his acting skills leave much to be desired. But this is not a dramatic piece, or the tale of an epic battle. This is a martial arts flick and in what regards kicking and punching and beating, Hardt does not disappoint. And despite this, Havoc is a well-natured fellow. Probably the guy every father'd want for her daughter (I just said that? Lame.) There're some strange surprises on the cast. Richard Roundtree ("SHaft") plays Havoc's former trainer now antique dealer. Carmen Elektra tries to "show her place" to Havoc during four scenes, for which she got one hundred grand. David Carradine plays Bill... again. All in automatic. Don't expect any acting shocking you.
Then there are these two sisters. Neither of them can act well and there's this strange lesbic trend in their scenes together. Not as evident as in Bill's...sorry, Carradine's assistants, and way too subtle.
Pyun's directing is normal here. The fights are well-choreographed yet there's an unnecessary over-repetition of the flashback scene that could have been done without. It lacks that special something though.
Far better than some action junk Lorenzo Lamas has done. It has good martial arts, nice scenes, beautiful views of Guam, plenty of girls in bikini, but you'll want to press MUTE when the sisters start talking. It's a watchable flick. For only one watch.
It's about a sport's photographer who goes to Guam to take pictures of some hotel. He meets some girls (playboy model Joanna Kruppa plays one of the girls - in a cover story for Playboy Kruppa called MAX HAVOC "really stupid!" Well she's right) and some kung-fu gang is chasing her. I don't know why. Anyways, Max Havoc helps her out. The fights are so poorly done, it looks like stuff my kids shoot on their Hi-8 Video camera. But beyond that, MAX HAVOC is so BORING. You want to fast forward through it, but that doesn't even help!
The movie makes not a lick of sense and it's hard to imagine someone making a film this bad. I IMDb'd MAX HAVOC director Albert Pyun and he makes really awful movies, so I guess it makes sense that he made MAX HAVOC. That seems to be his forte: making really bad movies, but not "so bad they're good" movies say in the spirit of Ed Wood, his movies just flat out suck. Talk about ZERO talent. I wonder if he cons people like he conned the Guam Government when he made this film. What a legacy!
If you see this movie in the video store (somehow I don't think it will ever make it off the island of Guam), hold your nose!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe Guam government sued producer John F.S. Laing after the film was finished, claiming he wrongfully convinced government officials to contribute $800,000 to help guarantee a production loan which was defaulted on. Laing denied this and counter-sued, claiming the government broke a promise of financial support and cost his company $1.5 million, which also forced him to cancel other planned projects as well. Laing also went on to blame director Albert Pyun for the film's financial woes.
- GaffesChristie is studying to be a heart surgeon (M.D.) but in conversation Jane says she's paying for Christie's Ph.D.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Max Havoc: Curse of the Dragon (2021)
- Bandes originalesBoy I
Composed by Anthony Riparetti (as Tony Riparetti)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Max Havoc: Curse of the Dragon?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Макс Гейвок: Прокляття нефритового дракона
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1