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Blind Fury

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Blind Fury
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPhillip Noyce
Written byCharles Robert Carner
Based on
Produced byTim Matheson
Daniel Grodnik
Starring
CinematographyDon Burgess
Edited byDavid A. Simmons
Music byJ. Peter Robinson
Production
company
Distributed byTri-Star Pictures
Release dates
  • August 17, 1989 (1989-08-17) (West Germany)
  • March 16, 1990 (1990-03-16) (United States)
Running time
86 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2,692,037 (domestic)[1]

Blind Fury is a 1989 American action comedy film directed by Phillip Noyce and starring Rutger Hauer, Terry O'Quinn, Lisa Blount, Randall "Tex" Cobb, and Noble Willingham.[2] It is a modernized, English-language remake of Zatoichi Challenged, the 17th film in the Japanese Zatoichi film series.[3]

The film follows Nick Parker (Hauer), a blind, sword-wielding Vietnam War veteran, who returns to the United States and befriends the son of an old friend. Parker decides to help the boy find his father (O'Quinn), who has been kidnapped by a major crime syndicate. This was Phillip Noyce's American film debut.

After premiering in West Germany, Blind Fury was released in the United States by Tri-Star Pictures on August 17, 1989. It received mixed-to-positive reviews,[4] but failed to find an audience at the box office. In the years since its release, the film has developed a cult following.

Plot

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While serving in Vietnam, American soldier Nick Parker is blinded by a mortar explosion. Rescued by local villagers, he recovers his health and, though he remains blind, was trained to master his other senses and be an expert swordsman.

20 years later, having returned to the United States, he seeks out his old army buddy Frank Deveraux, only to find that Deveraux is missing. Parker meets Frank's son Billy and his mother Lynn, Frank's ex-wife. Minutes later, corrupt police officers working for Frank's boss Claude MacCready arrive and kidnap Billy, planning to use him as leverage over Frank. Nick stops them; the officers are killed, Billy is knocked unconscious, but MacCready's henchman Slag mortally wounds Lynn before he escapes. With her last words, Lynn tells Nick to take Billy to his father in Reno, Nevada.

At a rest stop on the way to Reno, Parker tells Billy about his mother's death. Billy runs away from Nick and is grabbed by Slag. Slag escapes as Nick rescues Billy a second time, and Billy and Nick (now called Uncle Nick) become fond of one another.

They reach Reno and find Frank's girlfriend Annie, who agrees to take them to Frank. After escaping yet another attempted kidnapping by MacCready's men, Annie suggests they hide out at the home of her friend Colleen. Annie takes Nick to MacCready's casino, where Frank is being forced to create designer drugs for MacCready. Annie returns to Colleen's to watch over Billy while Nick saves Frank. Nick and Frank are reunited; Frank takes the key ingredient in MacCready's drugs and destroys the lab. Avoiding casino security, Nick and Frank escape and head to Colleen's to reunite Billy with his dad; they find Colleen dead, Billy and Annie kidnapped, and a note instructing them to bring the drugs to MacCready's mountain penthouse in exchange for Billy and Annie.

Knowing it is an ambush, Nick and Frank arm themselves with homemade napalm bombs. After killing all of MacCready's men, they find MacCready holding Billy and Annie at gunpoint. MacCready hired a Japanese assassin to kill Nick, but after an epic sword fight between the two, Nick wins by electrocuting the assassin in a hot tub. Slag shoots Nick in the shoulder and Nick throws his sword at Slag, impaling him. MacCready then tries to interfere only to be stopped by Frank. Billy escapes his rope and throws Nick's sword to him, but it lands in the hot tub. As Slag reaches for his gun, Nick grabs hold of the assassin's sword and slashes him, cutting him in half and causing him to fall out of a window.

Frank is reunited with Billy and Annie, and they leave for San Francisco. Nick drops his ticket, choosing not to go. Billy follows Nick, telling him that he needs him. Nick says that while he is fond of Billy, he should go back to his father. Nick crosses the street and vanishes as a bus passes him. Saddened by Nick's departure, Billy throws a toy dinosaur off the bridge where Nick catches it. Billy calls out to Nick one last time and tells him that he'll miss him. As Frank catches up to Billy, they embrace. Nick smiles or sheds a tear, puts on his sunglasses while holding Billy's toy dinosaur with left arm in a sling, and walks off into the distance.

Cast

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Production

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Blind Fury marked the producing debut of actor Tim Matheson. Matheson produced the film having been a fan of the Zatoichi film series.[5] Matheson and producer Daniel Grodnik spent seven years trying to find a distributor for the film. In 1986, the producers landed a deal with film distributor Tri-Star Pictures. According to Grodnik, various writers and directors were attached to the project before Phillip Noyce was hired as the film's director. This was the Australian director's American film debut, after his thriller Dead Calm had an international hit.

Rutger Hauer calls Blind Fury one of his "most difficult jobs" because of the combination of swordplay with playing a blind man. In preparation for the role, Hauer spent one-month training Lynn Manning, a blind Paralympian judoka whose first words to him were "I don't get confused about what I see."[6] Hauer's reverse-gripped cane sword, modeled on Zatoichi's signature shikomizue, was created by Tim Huchthausen.

Filming took place around the Midwestern United States, mainly in Sealy and Houston, Texas, and in Reno, Nevada; where the cast and crew underwent humid weather conditions. Of the intense weather conditions, Matheson stated, "We shot in the Midwest and West, and it was incredibly hot. Everything was burning up. We ended up buying a three-foot pool for the cast and crew to wade through to cope with the heat."[5] Studio interiors were shot at Ren-Mar Studios in Los Angeles.

The names of the characters Tector and Lyle Pike are a nod to characters from the classic Western The Wild Bunch.

Reception

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On their syndicated television program Siskel and Ebert and the Movies, film critics Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel gave the film "Two thumbs up".[7]

Reviewer Ian Jane of DVD Talk wrote, "Hauer does a commendable job in the lead and is reasonably convincing as a blind man. Like its Japanese predecessors, there is some humor interjected into the storyline that is handled well without becoming overbearing or taking over the action sequences."[8]

On Rotten Tomatoes Blind Fury holds an approval rating of 56% based on 16 reviews, with a rating average of 4.9 out of 10.[4]

A sequel to the film was planned, but due to the lukewarm box office receipts, never materialized.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Blind Fury (1990) – Weekend Box Office Results – Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
  2. ^ Blind Fury (1989), retrieved September 15, 2019
  3. ^ Astell, Hal. "Blind Fury". blog. Apocalypse Later. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Blind Fury". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Beck, Marilyn (July 24, 1988). "Hauer is in a 'Blind Fury' over samurai film". The Spokesman-Review. Archived from the original on June 11, 2010. Retrieved June 11, 2010.
  6. ^ Hauer, Rutger. "Blind Fury". Rutger Hauer Official Website. Archived from the original on September 12, 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ "At the Movies". Siskel and Ebert and the Movies. The Walt Disney Company, American Broadcasting Company. March 16, 1990. Retrieved June 12, 2010. [dead link]
  8. ^ Jane, Ian. "Blind Fury". DVD Talk. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
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