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Running Red

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Running Red (1999)

March. 30,1999
|
4.9
|
R
| Adventure Action Thriller
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Gregori is an ex-Soviet Commando haunted by the death of his brother, and trying to forget his old life in the US. However, Gregori realizes after he has already started a family of his own that the past is never far behind. A former superior from his days as a Russkie hired gun orders him to kill some people or watch his new family die. It looks like Gregori doesn't have much of a choice, because he's grown fond of having Angie Everhart for a wife...

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MoPoshy
1999/03/30

Absolutely brilliant

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Adeel Hail
1999/03/31

Unshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.

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Edwin
1999/04/01

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Skyler
1999/04/02

Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.

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Leofwine_draca
1999/04/03

RUNNING RED is another straight to video action thriller from the team at PM Entertainment. This one stars the hulking and bearded Jeff Speakman as a Russian who defects to America and begins a new life, only for his past to begin catching up with him as he's tasked to assist some very shady types in a sinister job. What follows is low rent in the extreme, merrily ripping off footage such as the bus chase from RED HEAT (again!) and offering the usual gamut of brief martial arts interactions, explosions, and shootings. It's fair to say that Speakman is on autopilot here while Angie Everhart has the thankless role of his wife. It's one not of PM's best, that's for sure.

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Comeuppance Reviews
1999/04/04

Gregori (Speakman) is one of the toughest dudes in the Russian military. Previously loyal to Mother Russia, after his brother is killed during an assault on a Spanish chemical plant, Gregori renounces it all and relocates to Sherman Oaks, California. After eleven years in the States, we see that he now has a hot wife named Katherine (Everhart), and even a precocious young daughter, Amanda (Ray) To fully complete the transformation into a U.S. citizen, he grows a beard and puts on some weight, seemingly in an attempt to strongly resemble TV's Richard Karn. He cleverly changes his name from Gregori to Greg, but even that doesn't stop his past from coming back. When Russian operatives enlist him to do "one last job" because "he's the best", "Greg" can't resist the lure of the classic clichés, and he actually wants to get revenge for his brother, now that he's offered a chance to kill his murderer, a guy named Mercier (Braverman). Also he gets involved in the political assassination game as it relates to a politician named Chambers (Miano). Will Greg be running away...or RUNNING RED? In our opinion, Running Red is the best Jeff Speakman movie. It doesn't have any of the fat, boredom, or mind-numbing stupidity of his other works. PM is the ideal place for him, and they used him perfectly. Sure, we would have preferred more Kenpo and less gun-shooting, but in the absence of the actual Kenpo he does wear an oversized shirt that reads Kenpo Gear, and the back says "Show some respect". Because it's PM, it's bright, well-lit, has a nice pace, and there are some classic blow-ups, car chases, car flips (even a double-car flip), gunfights, and well-choreographed action. It's all very professional and works well. Director Jacobs has been hit or miss for us in the past; we loved A Dangerous Place (1995), but thought Freedom Strike (1998) was lame. Running Red puts another one in the win column for Mr. Jacobs.The title could refer to the fact that Greg is running from his red past, or the running of blood, or be a subtle reference to Everhart's hair. It's also the color of his daughter's Game Boy Color. Coincidence? Part of the plot even involves Greg's wife wanting to drag him to her high school reunion because she "wants to show him off to her friends". Presumably she's going to tell them she's married to Richard Karn. But another possible title could be "Running Red Heat", because, like Rangers (2000), the bus chase from Red Heat (1988) is interpolated into the movie. If Running Red and Rangers can afford this footage, it must be going at fire sale prices. But didn't PM realize that action fans would likely recognize what they saw? Maybe they were banking on the fact that the whole outing feels a bit...familiar. But still, it's Speakman at his best.The guy who plays Mercier looks a lot like Joe Mantegna, fan-favorite Robert Miano has a small but noteworthy role (was he contractually obligated to be in every PM movie?), and instead of a drug deal gone wrong, there's an arms deal gone wrong. Instead of a wacky taxi driver, there's a wacky exterminator. The daughter is cute in the classic Sarah Dampf style (bet you didn't know there was a classic Sarah Dampf style), and she loves soda and hamburgers. She also eats a cereal called Crispy Rounds. If action heroes didn't have daughters, what would get them up in the morning? Running Red is the perfect place to start if you've never seen a Jeff Speakman movie. It might be all downhill from here (though his other films do have some of their own individual merits, to be fair) - but Running Red is a winner, and quite possibly the best DTV actioner of 1999.

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Obi-Norm
1999/04/05

This movie, like so many others of its ilk, uses the retired soldier with skeletons in his closet. In this incarnation of this familiar set-up, the 'hero' is a former Soviet special forces soldier who fled to the U.S., with many of his comrades, after the fall of the old communist regime. The reasoning is he had done so many despicable things in the name of Mother Russia, that his life would certainly be forfeit if he were ever caught. Sound promising? I thought so.Anyway, as often happens to ex-special forces officers trying to start a new life in the suburbs with their beautiful, super-model wife, child, white house with a picket fence, and an SUV, his old army buddies came looking for him to get a favor. Violence and mayhem ensue.The one thing that makes this film particularly noteworthy, however, is the bus chase. I'm a big fan of chase scenes, and this one caught my eye. In fact, it caught my eye so much that I remembered it when, soon after and completely out of the blue, I watched a movie that I haven't seen in years -- Red Heat, with Schwarzenegger. The similarities were so striking that I waited for days until Running Red was on again, and I tuned in just for that chase scene. IT WAS THE SAME SCENE. I don't mean it was a similar chase with buses. I mean the editor from Running Red took the film from Red Heat and spliced it into his own movie!I guess this kind of result should be expected from some low-budget fare, but the worst thing is that they included the part with Schwarzenegger destroying that famous fountain in Chicago, while the chase in Running Red was supposedly taking place in Detroit.I guess this is a satisfying enough movie if you want to see some overly melodramatic acting with amusing violence, all of it kept low on the moralizing, but sometimes the laziness of film-makers in this genre astounds even me.

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cbenavidez
1999/04/06

I knew going into this movie, that I wouldn't be seeing a high dollar movie, so I wasn't expecting alot. I was pleasantly surprised. Even though the movie was undoubtedly low budget, it still had a sensible and followable plot. The action in the movie keeps you watching, waiting for the next action scene. even though the scenes are unbelievable as far as the real world goes, at least you didn't have guys with pistols (that never run out of rounds) outshooting men with full sub-guns.All in all, this was a good renter. I would have never paid to see it at the theater, but I don't think that is why this movie was made. It was destined for DVD and VHS, and it's worth the money to rent it.I'll be the first to say, that Speakman needs a good Box Office hit, again.

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