![]() The UK 88 Films edition features a 40-minute interview with Martino, while the Code Red Blu-ray stacks things far more heavily with a batch of new interviews and a (really dupey-looking) trailer. The DTS-HD MA English mono track sounds pretty sturdy and represents the ideal way to watch the film as almost all of the primary cast uses their original voices. The film still looks pretty modest in appearance and a bit on the soft side (film grain is still evident but some shots have a vaguely waxy look). Some variations in color correction and black levels occur with the Code Red appearing to get the edge consistency-wise as it veers less to the yellow side (see comparison grabs below). Both appear to be from the same source, a fresh HD scan of the Italian negative that looks much, much better than the old Lightning Video VHS edition or the various gray market cheapie copies in multi-film DVD packs. After a legit DVD release in Sweden featuring a so-so non-anamorphic transfer, Hands of Steel saw nearly simultaneous Blu-ray releases between end of 2016 and start of 2017 in both the US and the UK, the latter also getting a DVD edition. The very busy Claudio Simonetti doesn't deliver one of his strongest scores here, but he's pretty much the only person involved who doesn't bring his all to the game. ![]() Heck, the motel showdown between Paco and a badass blonde cyborg fighter with very odd fashion tastes is worth the admission price all by itself. The film is a real blast for action fans with a wide array of bar fights, gun fights, truck and car demolition derbies, and other assorted mayhem that easily outstages the surprisingly restrained sci-fi elements (including a very Schwarzenegger-esque arm operation scene). He's a fun leading man here with a knack for physical action scenes, and it's always fun seeing familiar faces like Janet Agren ( City of the Living Dead) as the obligatory damsel in distress, regular scene stealer and endless sweat machine Eastman doing a riff on his similar character from Blastfighter, spaghetti western vet Donald O'Brien, and a decent baddie role for Claudio Cassinelli ( Screamers) that was sadly curtailed when the actor was killed in a tragic helicopter accident during the shooting of this film. The buff gym buddy of Sylvester Stallone was discovered at a screening of Rambo: First Blood Part II and quickly signed to star in this film, the first of five collaborations with Martino also including The Opponent, American Tiger, After the Condor, and Beyond Kilimanjaro, Across the River of Blood, as well as Enzo G. This film turned out to be a rousing star vehicle of sorts forGreene, who had been toiling in various one-shot TV roles and appearances in a couple of cable-ready indie comedies. However, that pesky remaining human percentage causes Paco to ignore his orders and spare his ethical target, which sends Turner's goons in hot pursuit as Paco contends with aerial and automotive chases and an arm wrestling challenge from local tough guy Raul ( Anthropophagus' Eastman). We soon find out he's a scientifically engineered cyborg who's 70% biomechatronic with a mission to take out a scientist whose biological work is mucking up the profits of Turner (Saxon), an evil millionaire industrialist. Through the windy streets of Arizona roams muscular man of few words Paco Queruak (Greene), who's on a mission that involves boxing people over the head. ![]() In the far-off dystopia of 1997, the America is a wasteland controlled by a totalitarian government with propaganda proclaiming "You Have No Future" everywhere in sight. The end product, Hands of Steel, turned out to be something of a surprise, a raucous action film and one of the great Italian "guy movies" that lifts openly from The Terminator but throws in more than enough unique twists of its own. ![]() In 1982 he scored a sizable international hit with the futuristic sci-film After the Fall of New York, so it was only natural that he would return to the realm of an action-packed United States dystopia once again. ![]() Though best known today for his classic run of gialli in the 1970s, director Sergio Martino also specialized in long runs of other cinematic strains like silly sex comedies. Starring Daniel Greene, Janet Agren, Claudio Cassinelli, John Saxon, George Eastman, Roberto Bisacco, Donald O'BrienĬode Red (Blu-ray) (US RA HD), 88 Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (UK R0 HD/PAL) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9), Njuta Films (DVD) (Sweden R2 PAL) / WS (1.66:1) ![]()
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