Commando Movie Review
Commando Review
"Commando" Overview

Rating: R
1985
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark L. LesterProducer : Joel Silver
Screenwiter : Steven E. de Souza
Starring : Arnold Schwarzenegger,Rae Dawn Chong,Dan Hedaya,Vernon Wells,Alyssa Milano,Bill Duke,David Patrick Kelly
The director's cut of Mark L. Lester's Commando couldn't come at a better time.
Action movies are getting increasingly cerebral and character-driven, which
isn't necessarily a good thing. Batman Begins was so focused on character
analysis and stark photography that director Christopher Nolan seemed
determined not to entertain anyone. As for the exploits of Spider-Man, when the
writer of Ordinary People (the movie responsible for unleashing the touch-feely
antics of Timothy Hutton onto the nation) is in charge of the script, no one is
safe.
Commando, first released 22 years ago, has the simplest of premises: Arnold
Schwarzenegger kills bad guys in every way imaginable for about 90 minutes.
That's it. There isn't a subplot about reforming veterans' benefits or an
extensive introduction into Latin America's political climate. Commando is one
of the best arguments available for the action movie as pure entertainment.
Schwarzenegger plays John Matrix, a retired Army special forces Colonel living
in mountainous seclusion with his young daughter (Alyssa Milano), a life that
is ruined when angry enemies from Matrix's past kidnap her. The conditions for
her release: Kill the dictator of a Latin American country, allowing for the
reinstatement of the exiled Arius (Dan Hedaya). Don't follow the rules, and
she's dead. Matrix boards the plane for his assignment but escapes (in mid-air,
of course), setting in motion a vengeful, race-against-the-clock search for his
daughter.
Commando is meant to be watched with your disbelief suspended and your levels
for deep, artistic satisfaction turned off. Essentially, you're watching a
cartoon for carnage-minded grown-ups, and Lester and screenwriter Steven E. de
Souza (Die Hard and The Running Man) execute the concept beautifully. The
action scenes are outlandish yet oddly captivating. You chuckle and cheer.
Matrix breaks one of his captive's necks in an airplane full of people then
tells the stewardess not to disturb the deceased because he's "dead tired." The
muscle-bound commando also kills one enemy with a pipe, pushes another into an
upended chair leg, and uses a table saw blade as a lethal discuss. There's an
inventiveness and cheekiness to the brutality that carries the movie, making it
more than a collection of gunned-down extras and macho posing.
And who better to play the lead then Schwarzenegger, who became a superstar by
being a physical presence without possessing a shred of charisma? The
difference between The Terminator and Commando's Matrix is that the latter
exhibits some human tendencies, like bleeding. Lester and de Souza let
Schwarzenegger wreak havoc and spout some terrific one-liners, which are even
funnier because the now-governor of California is such a stern and inflexible
actor.
Despite the movie's humor and its ability to both hail and parody action hero
conventions, Commando is not usually hailed as one of Schwarzenegger's best
movies. However, it should be, especially now. When action movies aren't clunky
dramas with muscles, their directors are covering the holes with CGI finery.
Commando is a reminder of a simpler era of American movies, one that very
skilled directors now have a hard time replicating.
Give him a drink from the water cooler, then torture him.
Reviewer: Pete Croatto





