The Company Man (Video 1998) Poster

(1998 Video)

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2/10
It's not just painful to watch...but Deadly.
tarbosh2200030 September 2010
"Deadly Reckoning" is an oddity that sadly is too junky and downmarket to be all that interesting.

A block of wood, excuse me, Frank Zagarino, plays Ernest Gray, bespectacled owner of the Either/Or bookstore (apparently a real place in Hermosa Beach, CA). He just wants to be left alone to raise his young daughter, Jennifer, and get her into Julliard. Unfortunately, he is menaced for $50 in protection money by a trio of middle-aged "homies". Their big threat is to call him "Book Boy". I know, I know. As if that wasn't enough, it turns out Gray - if that's his REAL name - was the "greatest spy of them all" for the CIA with the code name of Napoleon. One of his big achievements was to dismantle a terror cell named...The Cell. Now the evil Control 5 (Vaughn - that's his actual name in the film) and his henchmen, one of which is the beefy, shotgun-wielding Van Guilder (Hues) are after Ernest and Jennifer. Luckily, Ernest's compadres Lewis (Genesse), The Mule (Stroud) and Marianna (Giordano) are helping them out. Will Gray and his daughter Jennifer Gray beat The Cell? Frank Zagarino, who resembles a cross between Dolph Lundgren and Brian Bosworth, with the square-headedness of Howie Long, shows little-to-no emotion and his voice is weirdly monotonous. Matthias Hues joins the fray as Van Guilder, and he has some similar issues but he makes it work because he's charming. He is a hulking brute, and one of his "disguises" is to wear glasses and put his Fabio-like hair in a ponytail. But he still wears his trademark sleeveless shirt. The actress that plays Gray's daughter, Rebecca Ayre Doughty, gives far and away the best performance of the film and acts rings around everyone else (it's not her fault her violin playing is an obvious keyboard). Her beloved bear, Chewy the Bear has some sort of secret to it which is never fleshed out.

Robert Vaughn- yes, THE Robert Vaughn, shows us the definition of "slumming". He's gone from being nominated for Oscars to Control 5. How the mighty have fallen. In the end credits, there is a credit for "Special Effects Hair Stylist". We can only assume this refers to Vaughn's hairpiece. We love Vaughn and we want the best for him. Why is he here? Director Camacho, despite the nil budget, cheap feel and dingy "film" quality, still tries for some John Woo-style flourishes but they are pretty ham-handed. Note the bookstore and abandoned warehouse (of course) shootouts. Actually a lot of the movie is padded out with brainless shooting.

It seems the only people that should see "Deadly Reckoning" are die-hard Zagarino, Hues or Vaughn fans. Anybody who watches this glop will get their intelligence insulted.

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Yes, you read right, THE Robert Vaughn
Alfabeta4 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
The Magnificent Seven (1960) guy...

The Company Man is a substandard, no budget, boring action schlock and not in a good (so bad it's good) way.

Goons are completely unmemorable, screenplay is generic (our bookshop hero is actually a secret agent, who is hunted by a corrupt CIA agent, so the hero calls his buddies, but they are not all his buddies...). Dialog is either plane or stupid. Not a moment of comedy or wit. Action scenes have no impact and are poorly directed (random shots everywhere). Many times, the hero runs around so slowly that it's impossible to miss him (which they off-course do). Production is awful (sets are: some house, some coffee shop, some empty warehouse). There are no bullet holes in gunfights and almost no blood. Direction looks like it belongs in an episode of some soap or like it was done in director's spare time. Acting is flat. Hero is boring and dull. There's a pointless sex scene with no nudity. Music is unfitting, pointless and random. When hero's kid plays a violin, a synth music is played instead. Kid is extremely irritating in her role and looks like she's reading of the cue-cards occasionally. The film has way too much length of hour and a half (without commercials). Robert Vaughn looks mean and threatens people and that's it. His roll is completely unnecessary. How did they get him in this is unimaginable, because the movie's so cheap it couldn't have been the paycheck.

Action movies don't have to be great, or big budgeted, or even with a point, but they have to be watchable, they have to have some saving grace (even if it's one single scene or a character) and they can't be 100 % dull.

If there ever was a movie for one star...
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