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Lionheart
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DVD Cover Information Actor: Ashley Johnson, Deborah Rennard, Harrison Page, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Lisa Pelikan Director: Sheldon Lettich Brand: Universal Studios Writer: Jean-Claude Van Damme Producer: Eric Karson Writer: Sheldon Lettich Producer: Anders P. Jensen Producer: Ash R. Shah Producer: Sundip R. Shah Writer: S.N. Warren DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround; English (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 105 minutes DVD Release Date: 1998-09-09 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Studio: Universal Studios
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Movie Reviews of LionheartMovie Review: "Sometimes life is... is... ugly. And stupid. And mean." Summary: 2 Stars
The story: when his brother is murdered during a drug deal gone wrong, Lyon Gaultier (Jean-Claude Van Damme) deserts his post at the French Foreign Legion and stows away to America. Arriving in New York, he must make his way across the country to his brother's widow (Lisa Pelikan, Return to Blue Lagoon), whom he hopes to support with proceeds won from illegal underground street fighting...all while contending with a pair of Legionnaires on his trail.
I've seen about half of Van Damme's films, and thus far, "Lionheart" is one of my least favorite for the fact that there's not enough action, and what's there is not very good. Van Damme has about seven hand-to-hand fights with various thugs and fighters of differing time lengths, but only one of them is against another martial artist (Paco Prieto, Only the Strong), and even it isn't exactly show-stopping. I'm not saying that guys like James Thompson (Gunhed), Jeff Langton (Final Impact), Stuart Wilson ("The Rundown"), Magic Schwarz (Over the Top), or Abdel Qissi (The Quest) don't look like tough guys...they just aren't very interesting fighters and don't give Van Damme a chance to show off his better moves. Since the fights were choreographed by Van Damme himself (and Frank Dux and Michael Qissi), I'm very much surprised that they're not showier, but the fact that they aren't kills at least half of this Van Damme vehicle.
The acting keeps the movie afloat, mostly through the efforts the vastly underrated Harrison Page (Sledge Hammer!), who plays the stereotypical role if ever there was one of Van Damme's sidekick/partner/comic foil but is very entertaining in doing so. The aforementioned Lisa Pelikan does well as the widowed single mother, as does Deborah Rennard ("Dallas") as the wealthy, scheming fight organizer who freely switches between using Van Damme as a gambling chip and a piece of meat. A young Ashley Johnson (What Women Want) plays Van Damme's niece, and Brian Thompson (Cobra) and Michael Qissi (Kickboxer) have small, minion-ish parts. Everybody does fine, but nobody stands out besides Page. Van Damme gives the usual performance that needs no elaboration.
Not much is to be said about the story; some folks claim it's one of Van Damme's better plots, but I don't agree that it goes anywhere. There is some social half-statement about the "sick aristocracy" whose members get off on watching the less fortunate pummel eachother, but again, it doesn't really go anywhere. In all, the storyline didn't keep me interested, and neither did most other things about the movie. As a fan of action/fight movies in particular, I was surprised that I wasn't more entertained by this kind of film, but seeing as there are plenty more Van Damme movies out there, I don't feel too bad about giving up on this one.
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