
Warner Home Video - Warner Home Video
Release date: 1999-05-18
DVD
Director:Craig R. Baxley
Actors: Carl Weathers, Craig T. Nelson, Vanity, Sharon Stone, Thomas F. Wilson
Action, Action / Adventure, Adult Language, Adult Situations, Adventure, Assassination Plots, Blaxploitation, Chase Movie, Color, Comedy, Crime, Deadpan, English, Feature, Feature Film Urban Action, Fighting the System, Graphic Violence, Gritty, Menacing, Movie




Action is a proud man, a high-school track star, a dedicated cop, a sergeant who lost his lieutenant's stripes almost two years ago...
He jostles a conceited, two-faced, backstabbing mass murderer called Peter Dellaplane (Craig T. Nelson). Director Craig R. Baxley has not only carried it off, but makes you believe it... One must also give some of the credit to Carl Weathers whose erect muscular body and his charm and good looks give some credence to the heroics...
The picture contains fun, lots of action, and two sexy women...
Vanity looked so gorgeous when she was shot up with heroin...
Stone met her husband after his first wife died and his son went to prison... She thinks that he may seem greedy and arrogant but he remained loved by everyone, and the whole experience changed him... She also thinks that Jackson is not so different from her husband, that both are stubborn, and both intent on getting what they want...
"Some say his mother was molested by Bigfoot, and Jackson is their mutant offspring," a policeman explains -- no, not about Michael Jackson, but about the Detroit cop, ex-serviceman, and Harvard Law School grad played by Carl Weathers, who's hot on the trail of psychotic auto magnate Craig T. Nelson (named "Dellaplane" -- we couldn't possibly be meant to think him John DeLorean-esque now, could we?). Seems Weathers not only helped put Nelson's bad-news son behind bars but he also tore off the kids arm. Tore off? "So what -- he had TWO," reasons Weathers, cluing us in to a cross-examination technique he must have picked up at Harvard.
Weathers, who acts with his torso, is plenty amusing on his own, but the movie takes off into the Bad Movie stratosphere with the arrival of Sharon Stone as Nelson's gorgeous dim bulb of a wife, and Vanity as Nelson's gorgeous dim bulb of a mistress. Women in these movies exist to be naked, dead, or both -- and it's lucky for Stone she gets to do both, since that means she's not stuck in this flick till the end.
She meets Weathers at an awards ceremony for her husband, decked out in a black dress and enough white lipstick for a mid-'60s MATT HELM movie. We know she digs Weathers because she smiles AND flares her nostrils. Later, at a nightclub, we catch Nelson digging junkie Vanity, a long way down even from her association with Prince, as she sings and bumps and grinds ("choreographed" by Paula Abdul). "I expected a standing ovation," she whispers, sidling over to Nelson's table, who answers, "You're getting one." She berates him for not delivering her a Motown record deal and, when he asks for two good reasons why he should come through, she (yes) pops out her breasts.
Since this is a by-the-numbers Joel Silver production, Stone is gratuitiously naked too. Because she gets chummy with Weathers, villainous Nelson has to off her. "I love you," he says before shooting Stone deaad, then adds, "MORE than life itself,"
Weathers becomes the prime suspect, which sends him and Vanity on the run. With half of Detroit's underworld after them, Vanity coos, "We gotta go back for my purse. I'm not wearing makeup. I look terrible." (Vanity, thy name IS Vanity.) Weathers can't help but fall for a gal who, badly in need of a fix, mutters, "I feel like my teeth are hollow! My gums are made of rubber! My stomach's trying to start a bonfire in the back of my bloody head!" Commiserates Weathers: "I think I felt that way once. They call it love." It all ends up with more explosions and a "Who asked for it?" encore of the Pointer Sisters singing the theme song. On such trash, Silver got the clout tp bring us HUDSON HAWK.
I remeber seeing Action Jackson when I was seven years old and enjoying the movie like it was the best thing since sliced bread. I bouhgt the film on DVD back in 2003 and I enjoyed even more now and take for what it is a action comedy. Carl Weathers recalls Richard Roundtree's Shaft and Jim's Kelly Performance as Black Belt Jones. The film is full over the top and one that's for the guys.