Review of Survival Game

Survival Game (1987)
Actioner sunk by too many '60s in-jokes
21 March 2023
My review was written in October 1987 after a screening in Parkchester in the Bronx.

Its title quite misleading, "Survival Game" is a would-be action pic that ends up as a silly exercise in '60s nostalgia. Chalk it up as yet another video title receiving a token theatrical release.

Mike Norris, Chuck's similarly action-prone son, toplines as a kid who enjoys attending the War in Peace Survival Camp on weekends, where folks participate in gung-ho war games. Via a car accident, he becomes involved with Valley Girl-esque Deborah Goodrich, whose dad, Dave Forrest (played by Seymour Cassel), is just getting out of stir after serving a 17-year stretch related in his druggie activities in the 1960s, in which he foisted the hallucinogenic Forrest Fire on the public.

The FBI and Forrest's ex-partners are all hounding him as to the whereabouts of $2,000,000 in drug money, which he claims never existed. Both he and daughter Goodrich are kidnapped, but Norris and his military mentor Sugar Bear (Ed Benard) come to the rescue.

With lame action scenes and very low-speed chases, flat pic is constantly pushed towards campiness by script's references to '60s jargon and a soundtrack filled with oldies by such groups as Bubble Puppy and the Kingsmen. Herb Freed's listless direction reaches its nadir in a prolonged foot chase through city streets and a department store that is presented silently except for "Louie Louie" blasting pointlessly on the soundtrack.

Norris and Goodrich make an attractive couple, while Seymour Cassel obviously enjoys himself, but it's a long way downhill from t=his hippie-esque starring role in "Minnie and Moskowtitz". Film might have had a chance to work if scripted as a romantic or screwball comedy, but the need to sell it internationally as an actioner has resulted in an unpalatable mishmash.
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