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| Index | 14 reviews in total |
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Don't get your hopes up... T.N.T. Jackson is a poor man's Cleopatra Jones., 1 September 2003
Author:
Infofreak from Perth, Australia
I'd been warned off 'T.N.T. Jackson' but couldn't resist as I'm a sucker for 1970s trash like this. Directed by Cirio H. Santiago, one of the producers of the classic Jack Hill chick in chains movies 'The Big Doll House' and 'The Big Bird Cage' which co-starred Pam Grier, with Roger Corman as executive producer, and a script co-written by b-grade legend Dick Miller(!), how could this go wrong? Well it does. Kinda. Jeanne Bell, who I vaguely remembered from bit parts in 'The Klansman' and 'Mean Streets', is beautiful and is a reasonable actress, but lacks the charisma of Pam Grier, or closer to home, Tamara Dobson ('Cleopatra Jones'). Despite being mainly filmed in the Philippines it lacks the grittiness of the aforementioned Pam Grier vehicles and is closer to the fantasy of the Dobson Cleopatra Jones movies. Only it isn't anywhere near as good. On the other hand it isn't as downright silly as say, 'Black Samurai' starring Jim Kelly (a guilty pleasure of mine), so I can't say it's a complete stinker either. Bell is supported by Stan Shaw ('Truck Turner'), and Ken Metcalfe, who co-wrote the script with Dick Miller, and both actors were better than the movie itself. One thing that really lets the movie down is the fight scenes which just don't convince. In one of them Bell is topless, and that is certainly a novelty, but on the whole they just don't work. 'T.N.T. Jackson' is neither the best nor the worst blaxploitation movie I've ever seen. It's one of those movies that you won't regret watching once, but you are very unlikely to rush to watch twice.
7 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
She's a one mama massacre squad!, 21 January 2005
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Author:
Rich (skutbag) from United Kingdom
I managed to pick this up in a sale for one pound; thought it looked
like a laugh and bought it.
Just finished watching it and would thoroughly recommend it to
blaxploitation/kung fu/trash movie fans. The dialogue is frequently
laughable, the plot is predictable, and there are some bad editing and
post-production flaws in dubbing. Effects are generally pants, except
for one slow motion sequence with butterfly knives; which I
particularly liked. You also have a dodgy sex scene.
But on the other hand, the action scenes are pretty good with some
innovative sequences and 'special moves'. The music is also great
especially for fans of groove/funk.
This movie has everything you'd expect from a trashy kung fu movie-
crime lords, Afros, revenge, flares and of course EVERYONE knows a bit
of kung fu. It's only about 60 minutes long and if you can pick it up
on the cheap then do so!
8 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
So anxious to get to the "good parts" that it's nearly incoherent, 10 August 2007
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Author:
lemon_magic from Wavy Wheat, Nebraska
"TNT Jackson" isn't completely unwatchable. But either the version I
saw on DVD was edited with a weed-whacker, or the screenplay itself is
the lowest level of grind-house/blaxploitation sausage. Or maybe both.
Jeanne Bell is supposed to have been a Playmate at one point in her
career,and the movie makes the most of the connection by displaying her
breasts at least two times more than was really necessary (including a
hilarious topless fight scene that I am pretty sure was meant to be
funny). I will admit, they are quite nice. Still, she's sort of average
looking and doesn't have the charisma of a Foxy Brown, of even a
Cleopatra Jones. She does have her moments as an actress in the film,
though, but it would have been nice if the director had pushed her a
little harder or the screenplay had given her a chance to do more than
emote "attitude" and kick people.
Speaking of kicking people, the fight scenes (the other putative reason
to watch a film like this) are pretty poorly done.There's no real
choreography to speak of here, just people posing and sticking feet and
fists in the general direction of their opponents. One minor exception
is a nice moment with an opponent equipped with butterfly folding
knives; another is a sequence near the very end where an obvious stunt
double for Bell (and maybe for Stan Shaw) leap around and do some
decent sweeps and groundwork for a minute or two before Bell/"Jackson"
punches her enemy's liver out, Shaw collapses and the screenplay just
stops. (Again, I will admit that this is very much in the tradition of
Shaw Brother quickies since time immemorial).
There are a couple of supporting actors who are actually better than
the film deserves (I'm thinking of "Joe" and the fellow playing the
drug lord's right hand man). There's a halfway decent funk laden
soundtrack that complements the action on the screen and add a star to
the rating by itself. There's a semi-dodgy sex scene that manages to be
effective almost in spite of itself.
This one is strictly for hardcore fans of blaxploitation. I saw it out
of sheer curiosity, and I'm not sorry I took the time. But I can't
imagine wanting to take the time to see it again unless I decide to
write a dissertation on the pop culture intersections of "Kung Fu
Theater" and "Foxy Brown".
7 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Doesn't Deliver Where It Counts., 5 February 2006
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Author:
Space_Mafune from Newfoundland, Canada
A young woman nicknamed "T.N.T." for being virtual dynamite in a fight
and a knockout in terms of looks to boot, goes to the most lawless part
of Hong Kong in search of her missing brother Stag Jackson. When she
learns he has been murdered, she decides she will bring the killer to
justice in a fashion only she can.
Sounds good, doesn't it. Well, there's really nothing wrong with the
basic premise as a starting base for a martial arts/blaxploitation
action thriller, which is what this aims to be. The leads actually
prove pretty good too with Jeanne Bell fitting nicely into the role of
"T.N.T." and Stan Shaw doing well as the ambitious, power-hungry
Charlie. Where this fails miserably is in terms of the fighting action
it offers up. The fight scenes are totally and completely unconvincing
and/or sometimes so completely over the top it reaches the point of
ridiculousness which doesn't at all help when the basic focus of your
movie is a Kung Fu action heroine. Also the poor lighting, actors
sporting accents making them hard to understand, the confusing
camera-work and the sometimes poor sound doesn't help this obvious low
budget effort out either any. This does deliver in one area which may
delight some fans, it does offer up plenty of the T in "T & A", in fact
practically every fight scene in the film is proceeded by some type of
nude scene and Jeanne Bell actually does have one extended fight scene
in which she is completely topless.
In the end, this fails to be something you want to revisit because the
fight scenes are so pathetically, laughingly bad.
7 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Stimulating concepts, poorly executed, 5 November 2005
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Author:
gridoon
The stimulating concepts: T.N.T fights 10 men in the streets of Hong Kong; 4 men in her room while she is topless; an attractive blonde woman (Pat Anderson, who is a major hottie and kicks a lot of butt herself). The poor execution: the (occasionally sped-up) fight scenes range from clumsy to REALLY clumsy. Sometimes they look more like playfights; you can HEAR the sound of a hit but you don't SEE any contact. For a former Playboy Playmate, Jeanne Bell is an average-looking woman and her acting is stiff. But at least she's tall, she looks fit and she has the right attitude for this role down pat. As her love interest / main target, Stan Shaw adds the only touch of class to the film, and has all the best lines as well. The production values are dreadful, and the DVD picture quality is on the level of a bad VHS. For a better execution of the same story, I suggest you seek out the same director's "Naked Fist" / "Firecracker", made in 1981. The female lead in that one, Jillian Kesner, actually has some real-life martial arts background, so the fight scenes are much better. (**)
5 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Fun, 31 August 2002
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Author:
Nik-14 from Los Angeles, CA
Recently found a series of DVDs called Women Who Kick Ass. I've seen a few
kung fu films over the years. Some were superb, some were ok and some were
lousy. The common denominator in all being the action scenes were pretty
good. The acting, writing and general filmaking in this film is terrible
plus the fight scenes really suck. It looks like most the action scenes
were done by stunt people and the actresses didn't know much about martial
arts.
All this taken into account it is still a fun film to watch.
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Funky blaxploitation classic. A must see., 7 December 1998
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Author:
sunny from Oakland, CA
This blaxploitation classic about a kung fu mama who travels
to Hong Kong to avenge her brother's death offers everything
you learned to expect from the genre. Playmate Jeannie
Bell
(with a giant afro) really kicks ass and usually loses
her
clothes very quickly. If you don't take it all too seriously, the movie is
great fun to watch. Stan Shaw gives a solid
performance, Jeannie Bell is a little less convincing.
Pam
Grier she ain't.
This is where Quentin Tarantino got his idea for the
light switch scene in "Jackie Brown" from.
The soundtrack by Don Julian is a gem and is frequently
used in rap songs.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
A total hoot., 19 November 2011
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Author:
Scott LeBrun from Canada
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"T.N.T. Jackson" is, admittedly, the kind of thing I wouldn't consider "good", but it does deliver a fair amount of exploitative fun, combining the blaxploitation and martial arts genres. Co-written by actor Ken Metcalf, who plays the white drug lord Sid, and actor Dick Miller - yeah, *that* Dick Miller! - it stars pretty, voluptuous former Playboy Playmate Jeannie Bell as Diana "T.N.T." Jackson, a karate expert who travels to Hong Kong (the movie was actually shot, like many of its kind, in the Philippines) in search of her brother, who was murdered by American hoodlum Charlie (Stan Shaw), who's determined to gain control of the entire local drug trade. T.N.T. teams with local martial arts instructor Joe to take on the bad guys. As produced and directed by the ubiquitous Cirio H. Santiago, the movie is breezy fun, that at the very least is fairly well paced, getting down to business quickly enough and including as many fights as it can. Bell, who displays *plenty* of attitude, comes off well enough in the fight scenes, and has some chemistry with Chiquito, who plays Joe. Incidentally, the write-up in the annual paperback guide to movies by Leonard Maltin and associates has it wrong in that Ms. Bell is *not* constantly getting her top yanked off. She only displays her breasts twice, but in one of these scenes she shows off her body in a highly amusing fight with multiple bad guys that she plays almost totally nude, which has to rank as the highlight of the movie for trash fans watching. The acting from the cast is engaging, with Shaw, who had a respectable subsequent career as a character actor, making for a fun villain, and sexy blonde Pat Anderson playing the lady in Sid's employ who turns out to be a federal agent, or as T.N.T. would put it, a "pig". The fight scenes indeed don't quite work and could have been better choreographed. Accompanied by a typically funky and energetic music score (by Tito Sotto), "T.N.T. Jackson" still makes for an acceptable diversion, if not on the level of blaxploitation icon Pam Grier's best vehicles. The ending is just too abrupt, although it features an unexpected, unlikely, and utterly hilarious act of brutality. Fans of this sort of thing may be reasonably entertained. Seven out of 10.
5 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
So Bad It's Not Awfully Good, 10 July 2006
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Author:
verbeagetwo from United Kingdom
Now any Blaxploiation fan will recognise the ingredients: big Afros,
topless babes, surreally bad fashions and some 'jive' talk. In this
case add in a lead who can't act, a plot that makes little sense,
editing by someone with no hands who has been blindfolded and the most
god-awful fight scenes and you have 'TNT Jackson'. Not quite bad enough
to be good, but not good enough to be bad, this is a wonderful mess
from start to finish. I especially loved the endless continuity errors
and the lead's white stunt double.
This is so '70s bad Far Eastern martial arts meets black power that it
hurts, but boy it hurts so good! I am ashamed to admit that I almost
enjoyed it.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
An entertainingly trashy piece of 70's chopsocky blaxploitation schlock, 2 September 2007
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Author:
Woodyanders (Woodyanders@aol.com) from The Last New Jersey Drive-In on the Left
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Feisty Dianna Jackson (a winningly spunky performance by gorgeous former "Playboy" Playmate Jeanne Bell) goes to Hong Kong to take out the evil heroin ring that murdered her brother. Dianna's assisted by friendly karate master Joe (amiable Chiquito), faces opposition from undercover narcotics agent Elaine (lovely, buxom blonde babe Pat Anderson), and romances cocky, ruthlessly ambitious Charlie (essayed with supremely arrogant aplomb by Stan Shaw) while plotting her revenge against nefarious drug kingpin Sid (an effectively slimy Ken Metcalfe). Director Cirio H. Santiago, working from a blithely trashy script co-written by none other than Dick Miller (!), crams the lively and eventful 72 minute running time with a plethora of gratuitous distaff nudity and loads of badly staged martial arts fight scenes (Bell is clearly doubled by a squat guy wearing a giant Afro wig!). The definite sleazy highlight occurs when a topless Bell singlehandedly beats up a bunch of thugs in her hotel room. Felipe Sacdalan's raw, grainy, scratched-up cinematography, the clumsy use of strenuous slow motion, the funky-groovin' score, the laughably inept fight choreography, and the surprisingly gruesome conclusion add immensely to the overall scuzzy fun of this deliciously cheesy grindhouse exploitation hoot.
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