Movie Reviews : ‘Bulletproof’? It’s Shot Through With Holes
- Share via
“Bulletproof” (citywide) is almost sense-proof as well. First it asks us to accept Gary Busey as a gung-ho cop who tangles single-handedly with gun-running gangs.
Then--in the era of multibillion-dollar high-tech military programs--we’re presented with a major superpower confrontation somewhere down in Mexico, where a scurvily grinning, sadistically murderous band of Cubans, Nicaraguans and Arabs--dominated by a Soviet officer who talks like Bela Lugosi--have imprisoned a few CIA agents, a priest and assorted peasants in the local church. They’ve also stolen America’s ultimate new weapon--which turns out to be a bulletproof tank.
Wait a minute. A bulletproof tank? What’s the target of this invasion: Disneyland? Pretty soon, bulletproof Busey is dodging flak and slipping ammo south of the border, while his old girlfriend, peppery-tongued trouble-shooter Darlanne Fluegel, is fighting off the oily attentions of the baddies’ glowering, leering, sex-crazed Arab leader (Henry Silva).
The writing here is probably less intelligent than Silva’s much-mentioned camel--and Steve Carver’s direction probably moves more slowly. Only the opening scene has any life. For the rest of “Bulletproof” (MPAA-rated R, for sex, violence, nudity and language), dreary music drones while actors thrash around sullenly in muddy cinematography and muddier platitudes.
It’s a genuine shame to watch Busey--one of the most vital character actors of the ‘70s, wasting himself in a cliche-ridden stinker like this. Or to see those two old Peckinpah troupe veterans--L. Q. Jones and R. G. Armstrong--slogging along in their thankless honcho roles. It’s as if the movie itself were a terrorist attack, torturing the cast and holding the audience hostage, while systematically stupefying them. Advice to the potential customer: never negotiate.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.