Blanco humano

  • Estados Unidos Hard Target
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Sinopsis(1)

Dos hombres despiadados, Fouchon y Van Cleaf, han convertido Nueva Orleans en su particular coto de caza, donde organizan siniestros torneos que enfrentan a sus asesinos con veteranos de guerra, a quienes prometen 10.000 dólares si logran sobrevivir. Desde luego, ninguno de los infortunados que se atreve a probar suerte en tan sanguriento juego llega a cobrar el premio. Las cosas cambiarán el día en que Chance Boudreaux (Jean Claude Van Damme) decide participar en el juego... Chance, sin embargo, no es un héroe noble y altruista, sino un solitario "cajun" que solamente quiere cobrar los 217 dólares que necesita para saldar sus deudas con el sindicato de marineros mercantes. (United International Pictures)

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Reseñas (7)

POMO 

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español Puede que el guión de Blanco humano sea la clásica película de clase B con Van Damme y clichés tontos en algunas partes, pero John Woo sabe hacer maravillas. La larga melena de Van Damme vuela por los aires con la misma genialidad con la que lo hace él mismo tras estrellar su moto contra un jeep, Lance Henriksen con abrigo negro y portando una elegante escopeta es el villano más despiadado y arrogante amante de los pianos, y Yancy Butler es la diosa del sexo salvaje ONS. ¡La mejor película de Van Damme! ()

JFL 

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inglés Hard Target reappears years later in a longer working version (116 minutes), which is considered to be Woo‘s director’s cut. It differs from the theatrically released version mainly in the differently edited and composed action sequences and a handful of Woo‘s trademarks, primarily where his work with pathos is concerned. The most noticeable change is the mirror montages that literally reveal the motivations of Fouchon and Boudreaux, while Henriksen‘s antagonist is introduced while playing the piano in a spacious mansion, which is intercut with documentary footage of wild game being killed by hunters, and Van Damme‘s protagonist receives a shotgun from his uncle in his cottage in the closing part of the film, which is interspersed with shots of people killed by Fouchon; whereas killing is a form of amusement for the bad guy, it is a means of revenge and punishing evil for the hero. Furthermore, the working version contains two sequences of Chance and Natasha coming together, where we learn more about these characters, but there is also a full spectrum of additional shots and brief passages. Conversely, the theatrically released version contains a much longer and more bombastic elimination of the antagonist – in the working version, Van Damme simply kicks Henriksen once from a high jump, launching Henriksen onto a pile of rubbish, and then throws a grenade at his feet, eliciting a look of annoyed resignation from the villain, and finito. ____ From today‘s perspective, Hard Target is an amazing relic due to the fact that they simply don’t make many movies like this anymore; in the new millennium, we are witnesses to the extinction of the mid-budget action-movie category. This is connected with changes in distribution and the gradual restriction of the market for physical media for home use – only big-budget, high-concept spectacles and sophisticated, expensive genre flicks make it to the cinemas today, while the video market is now driven solely by low-budget C-movies and acts of desperation from the likes of Asylum and Tomcat Films. Though it is still possible to find ambitious filmmakers with a distinctive action style in the latter category, they are rarely given the ideal constellation of resources and appropriate actors to show what they can do (see Isaac Florentine and Undisputed III, William Kaufman and Sinners & Saints and John Hyams and Universal Soldier: Regeneration). In its day, Hard Target was one of several generously financed B-movie action projects that enticed viewers with a mid-level star in the lead role and a fresh concept, or rather a variation on a traditional theme. Whereas other contemporary projects in the given category, such as Universal Soldier, Under Siege and Timecop, were based on a strong high-concept premise, Hard Target has a surprisingly straightforwardly trashy screenplay. In this case, no one even looked too hard at the story, because the main attraction was the rising star Van Damme, who presented a new image (though from today‘s perspective, his greasy mullet and raincoat seem rather pathetic, but values were a bit different back in the dark days of the 1990s), and primarily the involvement of the renowned master of action choreography from Hong Kong, which promised a completely unprecedented spectacle (as the film‘s promotional materials repeatedly emphasised at the time). Hard Target is thus a representation of the ideal combination of Woo‘s bloody ballet and an American genre film, where the master was hired specifically for his qualities, but his style had not yet strayed into the realm of bombastic melodramas. Apart from the action passages, the film is interesting as an American B-movie with an unusually bold local atmosphere. The distinctively thematised Louisiana setting, imbued with the motifs of unemployment and poverty, which are further developed to the level of the crisis of the role of men in society and in the context of family, elevate the film above the level of an ordinary, generic action film in the same way that the use of local and historical motifs enhanced Woo's Hong Kong movies. () (menos) (más)

gudaulin ¡Boo!

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inglés Typical low-budget action spectacle filmed with the knowledge that the quality of dialogue is the last thing fans care about, and they won't bother questioning the logic of the story either... The script is as thin as concentration camp soup, and Henriksen should sort out his bills and limit visits to player dens, so he doesn't have to take gigs in these B-movie scraps... Overall impression 10%. Fans of action movies can, of course, add a few stars because John Woo simply knows how to do it. ()

Kaka 

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inglés So simple and straightforward, it's almost hard to believe. It is all the more a pleasant surprise, as this unbelievably fast-paced movie lasts less than a hundred minutes. The screenplay is empty, but the action is breathtaking, with John Woo’s typical tricks present in every other shot. Lance Henriksen as the main antagonist is brilliant, his arrogance and the gun on his belt overshadow the unimpressive Jean-Claude Van Damme. Simple exteriors, minimal actors – everything is subordinate to the action scenes, and there is definitely something to watch here! A fantastic action ride that you will appreciate the most on a proper home theater system. ()

lamps 

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inglés It’s still a classic, the kind nobody makes anymore. The action wizard John Woo, Van Damme with a ponytail, an intriguing plot and one of the best and most ruthless villains in history played by the phenomenal Henriksen. What ended up annoying me were Van Damme’s superhuman abilities, which he displays in every action scene, and I also rooted for Henriksen, so I just can't grant the 4th star :-) 65% ()

Necrotongue 

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inglés The film has a terrible script, poorly written dialogue and not even John Woo’s directing was particularly impressive. All the action scenes were in slow motion, and because there were quite a few, they soon grew tedious. Despite the incredibly slow pace, the director failed to notice many goofs, so for example Lance Henriksen takes off his burning coat in one of the scenes only to have it on again after a few shots. The film is chock-full of such nonsense. He would need to drag a cart with ammunition behind him not to run out of bullets, firing about ten into each enemy. And the jovial uncle.. A really bad film. ()

kaylin 

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inglés This is a great TV classic that I enjoyed remembering, and I finally found out which movie had that opening scene with the motorcycles. That scene is stuck in my memory from childhood, I just never associated it with JCVD. This is a period when JCVD was still kicking ass, and here, he demonstrates it fully. A great confrontation with Vosloo and Henriksen. ()