Fighting Mad (1978)
5/10
Kung fu + blacksploitation!
5 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
An American soldier - on his way home from the Vietnam War - is left for dead and is saved by a pair of Japanese stragglers from WWII, who train him in the way of the samurai. This movie is also known as Deadly Force, The Force and The Black Samurai, as well as several other titles. It's a compound of blacksploitation and the kung fu genres, with some social commentary mixed in along the way.

I've always been fascinated by the Japanese soldiers who didn't surrender after World War II. Here, they help our hero Doug - James Iglehart, who was Randy Black from Beyond the Valley of the Dolls - learn the ancient fighting skills he'll never to make it back home.

Turns out that Doug and his buddies - McGee (Leon Isaac Kennedy, Too Sweet from the Penitentiary) and Morelli (Carmen Argenziano, Grave of the Vampire) - have stolen gold on the way back from Vietnam for a crime boss. On the way back, they stab our hero, slash his throat and dump him off the boar. Luckily, those aforementioned Japanese soldiers are ready to teach him that violence really does solve issues.

McGee really wants Doug's wife Maria, who is played by Jayne Kennedy, who appeared on the cover of Playboy and was selected by Coca Cola USA as the Most Admired Black Woman in America. She was married to the actor playing McGee - Leon Isaac Kennedy - in real life. And back in the days before the internet, the two appeared in a celebrity tape so infamous, it's referenced in a Mr. Show sketch (it's at the beginning of the "Show Me Your Weenis!" episode where Wyckyd Sceptre gets caught on tape).

The soldiers that help our hero are played by Joe Mari Avellana, who was the Scourge in Wheels of Fire, and Joonee Gamboa, whose characters constantly bicker back and forth.

This movie has an amazing tagline: "She's in Playboy. He's out of Penitentiary. Jayne Kennedy and Leon Isaac in Fighting Mad." A bit misleading, as he's the villain, but what can you do?

Cirio H. Santiago is to blame - or praise - for this. He made more movies than we've probably reviewed on this site like Wheels of Fire, Demon of Paradise and Stryker.
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