Showing posts with label rae dawn chong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rae dawn chong. Show all posts

Sep 9, 2024

#1: COMMANDO (1985)

Let's party!

John Matrix, former commando, has retired from the commando profession and is trying to make a normal non-commando life (here) in the mountains of Cal-ee-for-nee-a with his daughter, Jenny, who is all that matters to him (now). Together, they share a life of deer-petting, vanilla-ice-cream-swapping, basic-defense-moves-teaching, and light kissing on the lips. John Matrix, it would seem, is out of the life. But someone has made a big mistake: former commandos of Matrix's platoon are being killed off one by one, and Matrix is next on their kill list. General Franklin Kirby, once-mentor of Matrix, flies in with reinforcements to Matrix's isolated mountain home to warn of the danger. Kirby then departs, leaving behind a handful of soldiers as protection for Matrix and his daughter. Not long after, a wave of mercenaries led by Arius, the former president of Val Verde, storm Matrix's house, kill the soldiers, and kidnap Jenny. Matrix can have her back...for a price: he must assassinate the new president of Val Verde, whom Matrix helped install after dethroning Arius. These commando-traitors thought they could get John Matrix to do their bidding. They thought they could control him. WRAWNG. With the help of Cindy, a spunky flight attendant and tardy student of an eight o'clock advanced karate class, John Matrix pledges to get his daughter back...and re-embraces the commando life, unleashing an explosion of bloody and pun-filled revenge that the bad guys never saw coming. From the warlords of Val Verde right down to the most anonymous henchman—all whom eventually cross paths with Commando John Matrix soon realize that they have...no...chance.

Here we are, on the last stop of the Top Ten Murdered Men Express. It's all led to this moment. It's dropped us off here in the middle of man-made carnage. Fires burn, houses disintegrate down to their rafters and beyond, men are cut down with bullets and grenades and bowie knives and the bare hands of the deranged and the dedicated. There is no greater exhilaration one can experience from an action film than the unfettered, untempered, unparalleled ecstasy that Commando can provide.

Even that title...Sweet Jesus Lord. Commando.

The sensation one feels on their lips when saying it must be tantamount to the feeling of laying post-coital with Aphrodite herself, or one experienced by heart surgeons when saving a life, or tweeting the perfect 140 characters and having it retweeted by, like, a hundred people. Commando is magic. It's imperfect perfection. It is everything the action genre never knew it could be, nor would ever dare to attempt. In exactly the same way Walton et. al looked at the atom in 1932 and said, "Shouldn't we split this?," 20th Century Fox looked at the script for Commando and said, "Shouldn't we make this?" Both feats are of equal importance, and both have contributed to the betterment of man ever since.

Written by Steven E. de Souza, who will always be looked upon as a god in the eyes of true action fans (when one writes Commando, the first two Die Hards, 48 Hours, The Running Man, and hell yeah, Ricochet, it'd be treasonous to describe the man as anything less than preternatural), and directed by Class of 1984's Mark L. Lester, Commando is it. Why they bothered to continue making action films once Commando left the can and brutalized audience eyes in 1985, one will never know. Somehow, despite everything, stellar action films continued to hit multiplexes in the years following Commando's release, along with them Die Hard, long rumored to be an unofficial Commando sequel.

With Commando, the distinction between what makes a film good and what makes a film fun has never been more pronounced. And Commando is fun. Always and forever. It's fun when your dog bites you, when your wife leaves you, when your kids wish you weren't their father, and when you've just gotten back from a funeral. If you were just laid off, come home and put on Commando. If you've just caught your partner in bed with someone most certainly not you, climb down out of your pity chair, slide that battered Commando VHS into your VCR, and adjust the tracking. When Commando cuts to black and the credits roll, don't frown because it's over, grin because when God made heaven and earth, he also created rewind. Watching Commando once is awesome; watching it twice is divine.

From first minute till the last, Commando is a cartoon. The title alone sounds like something you'd hear blasting from the television in the nearest playroom come Saturday morning. Nothing about how Commando plays out is realistic or believable. John Matrix is neither realistic nor believable—not in his skills, and not in the impossible things he can do. Watch as he carries an entire tree on his shoulder, or tears a seat from a car with one arm, or rips steel apart with his bare hands, or throws an entire phone booth—complete with man inside—over his head, or fights off twelve men at once, or pushes over a car, or holds a man up over a cliffside with only his "weak arm." Nothing John Matrix does or can do is even remotely possible, which is why he surpasses heroism and achieves godliness.

In keeping with this cartoon aesthetic, the bad guys of Commando literally hail from the land of make-believe. Val Verde was a popular destination in which to set action films during the 1980s, as screenwriter de Souza felt it best to attribute terrorist activities to a fictional country so as not to inadvertently ruffle political or diplomatic feathers. Keeping it vaguely Spanish and somewhat third-world, it easily blends in with the rest of that miscellaneous segment of the world about which Americans know nothing. (This region of the world is typically referred to as "not America.") [Fun fact: Val Verde is also the island where Dutch and co. hunt a flesh-ripping Predator and where terrorist General Esperanza is being held captive before he is freed in Die Hard 2, not to mention a handful of other references, one which includes dinosaurs. Based on these events, Val Verde is the worst place to live in all of humanity.]

Commando is about exactly two things: pride and murder. Even though Matrix flat-out confesses, "All that matters to [him] now is Jenny," the impression left from her kidnapping and his subsequent blood-soaked recovery mission is that Bennett et al. could have instead stolen his axe handle, or his Bronco, or the rest of the mysterious sandwich he chomps during the opening moments—anything, at all, so long as it belonged to him—and it still would have resulted in Matrix taking so many lives even the plague is in awe. Because if we're to accept the character of John Matrix as presented to us, he needs to kill. Not because he enjoys it, but because it's in his DNA. Because he's a master of the mutilation. Years before Jason Bourne was choking people out with rolled-up magazines and dishtowels, John Matrix was killing people with literally anything at all.

What makes Commando such compelling entertainment is that, like the T-800, it simply doesn't care about anything, and it has no agenda except to be fun. It wants to offer a terrific 90 minutes of very little exposition (just enough to propel the conflict forward) and metric tons of testosterone-fueled mayhem. From obligatory boob shots to impressively multi-variant ways of dispatching men that would put the entire slasher-movie sub-genre to shame, Commando isn't just everything and the kitchen sink, but it's an entire multi-billion dollar industrial complex assembled from nothing but kitchen sinks, forged from galvanized steel and the ruined bones of human men. It's Commando's utter lack of pretension and full-on embracing of fun that makes it so involving. Though much of Commando plays far funnier than was likely intended when it was released in theaters forty years ago, make no mistake that Commando knew exactly what kind of film it was, as did everyone involved in its creation. One of the very first, if not the first, to arm both good guys and bad with an entire platoon of quips and jokes and sarcastic comeback responses, Commando snuck in late to the meeting of the action movies, listened to everyone complain about social issues and the perversion of man, and said, "Don't be so depressing all the time. Let's party!"

There's not much substance within Command's running time beyond "Matrix good guy, kill bad guys!" and that's totally fine. Frankly, it's what the action genre needed—to transform it into something new, and to strive for live-action cartoon levels of spectacular destruction at which all you can do is laugh, because good god damn, this is all happening right in front of you, for real, and there has never been anything better.

THE GOOD GUY

John Matrix. Retired colonel. East German. Deer feeder. Vanilla ice-cream swapper. Daring food enthusiast. Boy George belittler. Old joke maker. Unmellow. Amateur auto mechanic. Failed solicited assassin. Accomplished unsolicited assassin. Paranoid maniac.

Arnold.

Schwarzenegger.

The man who created the term "action star." The man who has appeared in some of the most iconic films of the genre (the Cameron Terminators, Total Recall, Conan the Barbarian) as well as beloved cult classics (Kindergarten Cop, Last Action Hero). The man who created the perfect action character, in the perfect action film, offering the perfect action film experience.

Much like Matt Hunter, Chuck Norris' Invasion U.S.A. alter-ego, Arnold Schwarzenegger pretty much approaches John Matrix the same as he did the T-800 in The Terminator—as an emotionless killing machine—only Matrix isn't a cybernetic organism with living tissue over a metal endoskeleton, but an actual, honest-to-gosh skin-covered man. That he lacks the emotions and anything resembling human behavior much like that of the T-800 is what makes John Matrix such a wonderful hero. His emotionless approach to taking lives is similar to Matt Hunter for that reason, but it's less because Matrix is a sociopath and more that his tendency to eat sandwiches and wear sport coats is the only thing keeping him catalogued as a human being. Arnold's take on John Matrix can be easily summarized by the following: if Jenny is around, smile; if she's not, frown. This may sound like an oversimplification of Arnold's '80s-era range as an actor as well as development of his character, but it's sincerely not: Arnold smiles non-stop through the daddy-daughter opening montage, frowns when she's taken, and continues to frown the entire film—that is, of course, until they are reunited at the end, and the smile he flashes her looks like no natural smile any human being has ever presented. But it's the frown we'll see nearly the entire ride. It's The Matrix Frown. It's a constant meshing of anger and confusion. It signifies a man on a mission who will stop at nothing until he can solve all kinds of riddles and be various levels of pissed off while doing so. And he's pissed off by nearly everything he encounters: by the bad guys who steal his daughter and riddle his home with bullets, by the emotional instability exhibited by the saucy stewardess he forces into helping him, by the mall security cops only doing their job, by the barred windows of the nearest neighborhood gun shop, and even by his old friend and mentor Franklin Kirby, with whom he'll have a silence showdown at the conclusion of the film—after having taken the lives of a hundred men—because he'll be fucked in half if he's going to speak first.

If one were to look up the term "man" in a hyperbolic dictionary filtered through the chasm of action cinema, the definition would simply be "John Matrix." And with Commando having been released in 1985, he's not just a man, but a Reagan man, an American man. He is everything the idea of the American man embodies, nothing superfluous and nothing lacking. He is the man that other men don't even bother endeavoring to be, because they know such a goal is unobtainable. It's like striving toward being Apollo or God himself. And why bother with such fruitless dreams? Sure, a man might cut down a tree with a chainsaw, but a man will forgo using that chainsaw to turn that tree trunk into firewood, instead opting to chop it with an axe. A man may joke with his daughter about the odd singer she likes to read about, but a man will be sure to impugn that singer's appearance and identity by labeling him a "girl" so as to avoid sharing the definition of a "man" with such an effeminate spectacle. A man, in a time of emotional strife, may request the assistance of a woman who could prove resourceful, but a man will rip her shirt down the middle to reveal her cleavage and demand she play the part of tramp bait to trap his prey. A man, in desperate times, may rely on the entire god damn army at his immediate disposal, but a man will just fucking do everything himself, because he's the only army he'll ever need.

The name "Matrix," defined as "a mold in which something is cast or shaped," wasn't chosen after a bout of random brainstorming. It's not telling you that when John Matrix manifested the mold was broken. It's telling you that John Matrix created the mold, and no other man would ever properly fill it. Within the context of the film, this becomes especially interesting for one reason: in the first act, when Kirby tells Matrix that "someone is killing [his] men," Matrix replies, "but you gave them new identities." With Matrix living isolated in the California mountains, it becomes possible that he, too, has been given a new identity. And someone—either himself or someone else—chose the surname "Matrix." Regardless of who, the etymology was obviously inspired by a bout of almost masturbatory adoration—that if the man now known as "Matrix" had to live within the confines of a new identity, let it be known that he is the alpha male of all time. His birth name may have been stripped, but his masculine legacy never would be. As alpha male, at no point should he not be dominating every square foot of space he enters. At no point should he not be killing, nor not on his way to the killing. Because that's what a man does. He kills. In excess, and with flair. At times there are so many gun battles, or fist battles, that composer James Horner, who inappropriately and appropriately littered his musical score with inexplicable steel drums, exhaustively throws his wand in surrender at the scoring screen and falls heavily back in his chair, allowing extended portions of said battles to play out in beautiful awkward silence. And during these same battles, some tinged by music and some not, the firearms Matrix uses to sheer away layers of his enemy transform from shot to shot, from assault rifle to handgun to shotgun, as if all the weapons in the world cannot possibly keep up with the rate at which he takes lives. Because of Commando's utter lack of subtlety as it pertains to exemplifying Matrix's masculinity, it chooses the most primal of ways to display it using one single and unmistakable image: testicles—weighty, engorged, dangling—personified by the loose grenades hanging from his kill-vest, bouncing haphazardly on their nylon slipknots as he runs from one kill-point to the next.

In the midst of all the Matrix murder, note the film never ceases to fetishize Schwarzenegger's physique, from the opening act close-up on his muscles to his stripping down to a Speedo for the row from the plane to the island of San Nicolas. Up until then, his partner in crime, Cindy the stewardess, has been his willing accomplice, but upon his peeling off down to his skivvies, offering her a bird's eyes view of his presentation, her entire attitude toward him changes. No longer is she his platonic partner, but rather she becomes weak in the knees at the sight of him. "Good luck, Matrix," she says in a breathy whisper, moving her hair away from her face. And as Matrix rows away, the camera close on his unclothed throbbing pectorals, her eyes remain glued on him. She's clearly in awe of him in this moment, as the audience likely is, only her awe is now tinged with lust.

In addition to John Matrix being the ideal man, he's also the ideal soldier. In Commando, both of those statuses blur together into an incestuous smorgasbord of hilarious masculinity. One cannot be a man without being a soldier, and the reverse. In the film's opening when Bennett et al. begin to unleash their impressive artillery upon the Matrix mountain home, the soldiers left there by General Kirby to "protect" Matrix and his daughter are nearly immediately neutralized. Matrix, having sensed the enemy's approach before his so-called protection detail, dives quickly to the ground, leaving nearby soldier Jackson to be wounded in the attack.

"I've got to get my rifle from the shed," Matrix tells him. And as far as the approaching enemy: "Keep an eye out, they'll be coming. Remember, you're downwind. The air current will tip them off."

"Downwind?" the wounded Jackson incredulously asks. "You think I could smell them coming?"

"I did," Matrix replies sanctimoniously.

It's not enough that John Matrix could smell the enemy coming—that would be ridiculous enough on its own—but it's the "remember" that paints Matrix in this constant aura of superiority.

"Remember, they're down wind."

As if to say: "You knew that, right? You're on my level, right? Because we're both soldiers, and therefore both capable of the same skills...right?"

WRAWNG.

Of course the poor injured soldier isn't on Matrix's level. No one is nor ever could be. John Matrix exists one step beyond the end of the Linnaeun classification system. Forget "species." Matrix is beyond that. He's a freak of nature, a fluke of bad biology. He is a creation whose manliness and penchant for killing manages to completely supersede his utter lack of intelligence or common sense. Make no mistake: though John Matrix solves every problem that comes his way, he solves it either with brute force, idiocy, or by kidnapping someone who might prove to be useful. When John Matrix attempts to chase down his daughter's kidnappers in his Bronco, but discovers they have purposely dismantled the engine and ripped out the brakes, he literally pushes the useless vehicle off the side of the mountain and rides it all the way down with not even a mere inkling of a plan in his mind beyond, "I'm on top of mountain; need to be at bottom of mountain; FAST." And when John Matrix stands outside his steel-reinforced murder shed and punches in a super-secret passcode, for some reason only two digits—ONE, THREE—to unveil so many different weapons of human evisceration that this film could have only been made in America, you will learn Commando's one and only valuable life lesson: thinking bad; killing good.

The original draft of the script actually includes references to a backstory that threaten to humanize the Matrix character, such as an explanation for why Mrs. Matrix/Jenny's mother is no longer in the picture (she's passed on), or why Matrix is so adamant about rescuing Jenny beyond the obvious reasons (because he's missed out on every major turning point in her life due to his commandoing), or that Matrix is capable of showing empathy toward another human being (like when he patches up a wound on Cindy's leg), or lastly, at the end, during which Matrix and Cindy's romantic future seems more concrete (when Kirby mentions that Matrix and Jenny will need another two new identities, leading Matrix to cast a glance to Cindy and say, "this time we'll need three"). All of this was purposely removed—not for time, as their additions would have been negligible, but because someone made the wise choice to portray John Matrix as barely human. (Some of this is preserved in the lesser-seen director's cut.)

Though John Matrix lacks such little substance as a character that anyone could have played him, only Arnold Schwarznegger's version of John Matrix would have been worth watching a hundred times.

As the entire world knows, Arnold "retired" from acting in 2003 to pursue what would soon become a two-term role as governor of California. When that came to an end, old school actions fans were hoping that Arnold would return to silver screens everywhere and rejoin the action empire he'd help to transform. Encouraging reports that the Austrian Oak had stacks upon stacks of scripts on his desk and was perusing each one to find the perfect comeback vehicle filled genre enthusiasts with hope. After a very brief cameo in the well-meaning first entry in Sylvester Stallone's The Expendables series, Arnold returned, for realsies, in 2012's severely underrated modern western The Last Stand. His Unforgiven of sorts (an aging law man called into combat once more), the script's light touch, and infusion of welcome humor, in theory, was the perfect comeback vehicle. Offering exciting action set-pieces without the ridiculous spectacle of End of Days or Terminator 3, The Last Stand proved that even if Arnold was no longer capable of embodying the kind of physical intimidation bordering on absurdity showcased in films like Commando and Predator, he could at least still embody his bigger-than-life presence and remind older audiences why they gravitated toward him in the first place: his dry and quick humor, his iconic accent, and the perfect image created when he's grasping a firearm of any variety. Same said for Escape Plan, in which Arnold and Sly finally share significant screen time...about twenty years too late, but still entertaining and unique. Later would come Sabotage, the ensemble film from David Ayer, a radical take on Ten Little Indians. With a grating script and extremely unlikable characters, the film ended up being a hodgepodge of half-baked ideas, immense studio interference, and an obviously tacked on ending attempting to appeal to devotees of Arnold's entire filmography and persona. Though the film itself is a failure, Arnold at least deserves credit for having agreed to take on what was originally the villainous, mysterious killer, only to have that villainy stripped from his character and then reapplied to...the crackhead. And then comes Maggie, a surprisingly intimate and low-key film in which he offered up one of the best performances in his career so far. Sadly, it's remained very little seen. 

Following the box office disappointment of the newest and lamest Terminator, all eyes are on Arnold's next potential move, though that's not a sure thing. Not one of Arnold's post-political career films has set the box office ablaze the way he had perfected during the '80s and '90s, considering that his first comeback film, The Last Stand, is far better than any film he's made since 1994's True Lies.

Arnold's constant promises of "I'll be back" have so far never rung insincere—when he says it, he means it, and he follows through on it. The problem is audiences aren't back—at least, not the ones who comprise the bulk of box-office receipts come Sunday night. Arnold has over a combined 15 million followers on Twitter and Facebook, and yeah, it's much easier (and freer) to follow an actor on social media than spend the $10 on a movie ticket, but why aren't half of these fans and followers coming out to the theater? Where the hell are they come opening weekend? Maybe it's because, like many other pop culture phenomena from yesteryear, these call backs to older action stars and extinct action concepts just don't interest newer audiences. Unless their action hero is slapping on that fucking cape and grasping giant Nordic hammers, or driving cars out of building windows and into other building windows, audiences have no idea what to make of such things. One man, a normal everydayer, flipping cars and flying jets and carrying entire tree trunks? "What is this? What's going on? Where's the CGI and the bloodless violence and Scarlett Johansson?"

Arnold's reign as box-office superstar may be over, and while sad, that's okay, because it was inevitable. It wasn't only Arnold's ego that's led him to so many achievements in his life, but also his intelligence, and the dude is wise enough to know that there may be no reclaiming the opening-weekend domination game. This is why Maggie came to be, a film in which he not only doesn't mow down dozens of zombies at a time while chomping a cigar, but a film in which he's not even the lead character. Arnold's never going to turn his back on cinema, but he's aware there are certain roles he's no longer going to play. And when that day comes when Arnold does, perhaps, choose to retire from acting and focus all his energy on his numerous philanthropic efforts, those who worship him will always have his catalog from which to pluck whenever the mood strikes, and every new film given to us during this new era of his career will be a gift— even the stinkers—because they could've so easily never happened.

THE BAD GUY

"Bennett." Fake fisherman. Comeback lacker. Laugher at tough-talking soldiers. Fearer of John Matrix. Man with an edge/possessor of a daughter.

Vernon Wells is likely most famous for his villainous turn in The Road Warrior as Wez, the mohawked hockey-masked psychopath, but it's his role of Bennett that seems to follow the man everywhere, and for reasons both good and bad.

As for the good, Vernon Wells throws everything into his performance as Bennett and he's 100% willing to look absolutely ridiculous. Every line of dialogue slithers out of his mouth with a certain kind of intended or unintended sexual deviance. There's no scenery he won't chew, and there's no "top" over which he won't go. It doesn't matter that the whole "kidnap the daughter to force the hand" idea is a total paradox. (He admits to being scared of Matrix, but that his fear is canceled out by the "edge" he possesses, which is his daughter...but if he'd never kidnapped her in the first place, he'd have no reason to be fearful of Matrix...and since his plan was to kill the daughter regardless if Matrix fulfilled his obligations or not anyway, well...) And it doesn't matter that he risked his life by taking part in a bogus boat bomb in order to fake his death, but which wasn't witnessed by anyone except other bad guys already in on the scheme, rendering the whole facade totally useless. And it doesn't matter that he tells Matrix he was offered money to kill him but said he'd do it for free just for the chance, yet never considered exacting revenge upon Matrix until he was offered money. Wells' shrieking, leather/chain-covered sociopath outdoes all of the film's go-nowhere machinations strictly through sheer presence. In a way, Bennett is the perfect screen villain, because his role is just as enjoyable to watch as the hero's, and that seldom happens.

But the audience adores Bennett for other reasons...

Only in a film like Commando would we willingly believe that the doughy and BDSM-dressed Bennet could ever be a physical match to John Matrix. Whether standing face to face or engaged in knife-to-knife combat, the mere idea that not only are these two men squaring off against each other, but could actually match each other pound for pound, demands more suspension of disbelief and audience forgiveness than the entire climax of The Dark Knight Rises. When Bennett utters lines like, "You're getting old, John!" and delivers a healthy blow to John's kidney, it's hard not to laugh out loud, because (despite the fact that Wells is two years younger than Schwarzenegger in real life) Bennett's physical appearance alone adds the illusion of an additional ten years of age over Matrix, at the minimum. This is less to do with mocking Wells' appearance, who even by inflated Hollywood standards wasn't exactly ghastly, but it has more to do with how any man would look paired up against a shirtless and musclebound Arnold Schwarzenegger at the upper echelons of his girth. The film's already gone out of its way to establish that John Matrix carries entire trees around his property, but yet he somehow experiences difficulty when attempting to physically dominate some guy who looks like an unhappy middle-aged husband/father unpacking shirts on a Macy's loading dock.

Would it have made more sense for Schwarzenegger to square off against someone that at least embodied an equalized physical rival, someone like Stallone or Lundgren, or even his friends Franco Columbo or Sven-Ole Thorsen, both who appeared in many of Arnold's earlier films? Of course it does. But even if a more intimidating presence had taken on the villainous role, would it have had the same effect? As discussed in the entry for Hard Target, a different choice that may improve a film on its surface may not necessarily improve how much enjoyment the audience finds with it. In that regard, there is only one Bennett, and the idea of anyone else other than Vernon Wells playing him makes me laugh—and if he were here, he'd laugh, too.

THE BAD GUY'S HENCHMEN

The henchman has been a stalwart of the action genre for a long time now, but never has a film contained so many oddball and lovable mini-bad guys before this group of ragtag mercenaries named Cooke, Sully, Henriques, and Diaz (interview with them here) all found each other. Seeing them dispatched one after the other is like seeing a member of your own family get their breaths snuffed from their bodies, but only this time instead of being traumatic it's actually kind of hilarious. Though Bennett serves as the thematic main villain, being that the grudge he has against Matrix is personal, all of these men feel like adversaries that need to be subjugated.

Cooke (Bill Duke) is the tough-as-nails big Green Beret who, if Commando were trying to be a better film, would have embodied the main villain, simply because Bill Duke is an intimidating bad-ass.

Next is the beloved Sully (David Patrick Kelly), who plays the wormiest henchman in the history of wormy henchmen. Every line he utters manages to be more amazing than the one that preceded it; his is a character audiences love to hate. He doesn't walk, but saunter. He doesn't speak, but ooze. And he doesn't flirt, he mouth-rapes. If John Matrix's physicality were to transform and be quantified by scientific units of measurement based on sexual aggression, it would be called Sully.

Henriques (Charles Meshack) provides an interesting presence, dressed in atypical mercenary garb way too indicative of Pennywise the Clown's puffy jumpsuit. (His original demise, still taking place on an airplane, called for Matrix to stuff his corpse into an overhead storage compartment, which would have added an extra layer of morbidness to an already fairly morbid "joke.")

Then there's Diaz (Gary Carlos Cervantes), who has the honor of being Matrix's first kill, and a pretty significant one when considering the ramifications. Diaz's execution signifies that Matrix has no intention of going quietly into that good night. Diaz's demand of "mellow out, man!" is met with BANG.

And lastly, responsible for the scheme at hand is Arius (Dan Hedaya), the former president of Val Verde. Hedaya provides a curious hybrid accent that sounds Spanish, Colombian, Brooklyn, and strangely African all at once, something perhaps by purposeful design. He's likely the most recognizable and well-known actor in all of Commando (besides the obvious headliner, of course), making his appearance that much more welcome. The film attempts to make it look like he's the main villain of the piece, but the audience knows he's not—they know this the moment Bennett steps on-screen and seethes, "Payday!"

Without the presence of these mercenary misfits, John Matrix's journey from Los Angeles to Death Island would have been a lot less amusing, entertaining, and certainly bloody. Their collective and quite varying personalities define what makes ensemble casts work, and without any of them, something from Commando would have been clearly missing.

THE HOMOEROTICISM

For a long time, Commando has been dissected by fans and critics for its homoerotic undertones, which is just one more layer to this cinematic onion that makes the film so fascinating. By all accounts, it wouldn't be unfair to call Commando the gayest action film in cinema history. The inherent homoerotic content present in different aspects of Commando, from Bennett's wardrobe to some of the more on-the-nose-dialogue, has added fuel to the fire of that prevailing theory for quite a while now. The film's own director wouldn't agree with you, as he stated: "I don’t know what people are saying when they say that to me. [Bennett] seems to me like the most macho soldier or person you could think of." But others directly involved in the production would offer a counter-point, as did Rae Dawn Chong: "[Matrix and Bennett] are like lovers. The outfit they had on [Bennett], I mean, HELLO, he looks like one of the Village People. Arnold is the ideal, and if you can’t be it and can’t love it, you want to kill it. That really confusing sexuality comes through, and it manifests in violence." 

The act of watching Commando changes dramatically if the viewer maintains the subconscious theory that Bennett is warring against Matrix not because they need him for some bogus assassination attempt, but to exact revenge against him for his having thrown Bennett out of his unit after he'd confessed his love for his platoon leader and found that those feelings of devotion were very unrequited. From the too-tight SNL gay-bar wardrobe (which, in Wells' defense, had been fitted for the original "Bennett" actor whom Wells had replaced, said to be Wings Hauser) to the Freddie Mercury mustache to him lightly tickling the edge of his knife blade as he looks into a distant nowhere and says, "Welcome back, John...so glad you could make it," there is no denying that Bennett exudes a certain flamboyance that, in all seriousness, only makes his presence that much more cinematically appealing.

The "oops, it's gay!" dialogue ain't exactly in short supply, spoken by Bennett and non-Bennett folks alike:

"Silent and smooth, just like always!"

"When I knew I was going to get my hands on you, I said I'd do it for nothing."

"I don't need the girl!"

"John, I feel good! Just like old times!"

And then there's that unmistakable look of lust across Bennett's face when Matrix begins waving quite a large knife in his face, almost taunting him with it:

"It's me that you want. Come on, Bennett. Put the knife in me, and look in my eyes and see what's going on in there when you turn it. That's what you want to do, right? It's between you and me. Don't deprive yourself of some pleasure. C'mon, Bennett. Let's party."

In this moment, Matrix is finally acknowledging Bennett's lust and love, and he's using it against the man to throw him off guard and lure him into a trap. Bennett responds in kind: "I'm not going to shoot you between the eyes...I'm going to shoot you BETWEEN THE BALLS." As for the comeuppance of his character, two words: phallic penetration. (Spoiler.)

THE CASUALTIES

The Bad Guys

As for the henchmen with names, Diaz, urging for some mellowing out, gets a shotgun to the head; Henriques gets his neck broken on a plane and is left dead tired; Sully is let go...over a cliff; and as for Cooke, well, Matrix eats him for breakfast after turning him into shish kabob. As for the henchmen without names: one passport-provider takes a stray bullet and crashes over a mall railing; one head smashed against a giant concrete wall; two jeep-drivers shredded with an MP4; one stabbed in the gut; one throat cut (slowly); two catchers of throwing knives; one stabbed with some kind of...shooting knife...thing; one shot and plummeting from a watch tower; four shot down with an assault rifle; twelve blown up by controlled explosions; two shot with an AK-47; five blown to bits with a rocket launcher; eighteen shot with an AK-47; five blown up by grenades; seven shot by an MP4; two shot by a handgun; three torn apart by shotgun blasts; one pitchfork to the chest; two guys catch saw blades with their head and neck, respectively; one gets an underhanded axe to the stomach; one gets his arm maniacally cut off with a machete; twenty-three (maybe) are shredded by a chain gun; and Arius, the evil mastermind, gets shotgunned out the window. All in all, John Matrix murders the entire population of San Nicolas Island plus eight dudes.

The Good Guys

One very old and very retired commando gets cut down by a couple of fake garbage men. One former commando and now car salesmen gets run over by his own inventory. A few miscellaneous men may or may not be blown up by a confusing boat bomb. "Good-but-not-as-good-as-Matrix" soldiers Jackson and Harris get taken down by Diaz. A mall security guard takes a Sully bullet.

THE BEST KILL

Hands down, it's the demise of Sully that wins the top honor, and it's for one reason only: it's pure, unconvoluted, premeditated murder. Every man who loses his life against John Matrix during Commando's running time is because he was an immediate threat, grasping either a gun or a grenade. They were men who had deliberately placed themselves into harm's way, confident they could overcome this retired commando named John Matrix. But Sully wasn't one of these men. He wasn't challenging Matrix one-on-one in a cramped hotel room. He wasn't sitting cocksure in a chair, an assault rifle within easy range, taunting Matrix about his kidnapped daughter. He was, in fact, terrified of Matrix and was attempting to flee in his own car. Sure, he possessed vital information that led to the next big part of the puzzle, but he was a small, weak, wormy kind of guy who posed no physical threat.

After holding Sully over the cliffside to goad him into spilling all the diabolical beans, Matrix seems satisfied with the information provided.

"Remember, Sully, when I promised to kill you last?" Matrix teases.

"That's right, Matrix!" Sully agrees. "You did!"

Matrix not only lets Sully plummet to his death, but leans forward just the least bit for an unfettered view of man-on-rock contact.

This, of course, is followed by Cindy asking, "What did you do with Sully?"

"I let him go."

Terrific.

THE DAMAGE

John Matrix suffers a wound on his side, a few hits to the kidney, a gunshot to the shoulder, a knife slash to his chest, and a lead pipe to the body that, if he'd been a mere mortal, would've certainly broken his vertebrae. Not bad for a guy who jumps out of a plane and falls a thousand feet into a marsh, or who hurtles down a mountainside in a Bronco with no brakes, or who gets hit by a car, or who is shackled into a police van that's eventually pulverized by a rocket launcher and upended, or who drives a Porsche into a telephone pole at tremendous speed, or who gets blown backward by a grenade, or who hurls himself through a glass door.

THE BAD GUY'S COMEUPPANCE

Matrix and Bennett engage in a knife fight, a punch fight, a metal implements fight, and a fire fight (fire, not guns) before Bennett momentarily starts getting electrocuted by some circuitry but then decides to stop getting electrocuted and easily frees himself, not the last bit winded from the volts that had just coursed through his body. Sensing that he is losing the fight, Bennett grabs for a gun and threatens to shoot Matrix, who shouts his secret magic rejuvenation codeword ("BULLLLLLSHIT!") and impossibly rips a section of steel pipe off the wall, only to further impossibly hurl it through an entire human man and a steel boiler.

Matrix snarls, "Let off some steam, Bennett," who does just that.

THE LINE

"I'll be back, Bennett."

"Don't disturb my friend. He's dead tired."

"This used to be a great place for hunting slash."

"You feckin' whore."

"No."

"Trust me."

"Get fucked!"

"You're a funny guy, Sully, I like you. That's why I'm going to kill you last."

"Remember, Sully, when I promised to kill you last? I LIED."

"Fuck you, asshole."

"I eat Green Berets for breakfast. And right now, I'm very hungry."

"I can't believe this macho bullshit."

"We'll take Cooke's car. He won't be needing it."

"Come stà?" (Matrix keeps his greetings informal.)

"BUUUUULLSHIT!"

"Let off some steam, Bennett."

And, of course:

"Just bodies."

THE VERDICT


Commando, film of many joys,
Filled with senselessness for boys.
Had it been you never were,
There'd be no action connoisseur.

Commando with your lead so macho,
Forevermore you'll be head honcho.
Colonel Matrix, big and strong,
Ripping clothes off Rae Dawn Chong.

Jenny taken, Matrix shaken,
"Dead tired" Henriques - don't awaken!
Sully plunges to his death,
Cooke's last words are bloody breath.

A hundred men are no big deal,
Matrix cuts them up with zeal.
Arius forever screams,
Bennett fries and let's off steam.

From the lips of Franklin Kirby,
To the "country" of Val Verde.
Matrix squints against the breeze,
And then he mumbles, "Just bodies."

Commando, you're forever legend,
A cinematic carnage engine.
Could your might be one day matched?
Of course that's WRAWNG, there's just no chance.

I love you, Commando. Good night.


Oct 4, 2020

LETTING OFF STEAM: AN INTERVIEW WITH THE HENCHMEN OF 'COMMANDO'


[The below interview originally ran on Cut Print Film in October 2013 to celebrate Commando's thirtieth anniversary. It is reprinted here with only minor updates.]

Commando, written by Steven E. de Souza and directed by Mark L. Lester, turns exactly thirty-five years old today, and yet enthusiasm for the film has never diminished. Perhaps that’s because fans who worship Commando are smart enough to know that John Matrix is not the only bad-ass worth celebrating. It is the film’s array of henchmen and the ensemble of character actors who gave them life that elevate Commando to new heights of pure enjoyment.

Joining me for a very bad-ass discussion are three of the greatest henchmen to have ever worked incongruously to exact the scheme of the evil main bad guy: the big Green Beret Cooke (Bill Duke; Predator, Action Jackson), the very mellow Diaz (Gary Carlos Cervantes; Scarface, Wild Wild West), and funny guy Sully (David Patrick Kelly; The Warriors, John Wick). These three men graciously took the time to reflect on their Commando experiences, including their (death) scenes, their memories of the departed Charles Meshack, who played fellow henchman Henriques, and what the film has come to mean to each of them.

So get ready, Commando fans: all hell is about to break loose.

Let’s party.



Q: Let’s start at the beginning. How did you end up working on Commando?

BILL DUKE: I auditioned. Joel Silver saw my work. He knew me from my film Car Wash and he liked what I did, so they took it from there. And after that, we worked on Predator together. He liked what I’d done on Commando, so that’s how that got started.

DAVID PATRICK KELLY: The producers were my guys, Joel Silver and Lawrence Gordon, who had done The Warriors and 48 Hours with me. So Joel called me up and asked me to do it, and that’s the way it happened. It was a great deal of fun.

GARY CARLOS CERVANTES: It was a question of perseverance, and making the right connections and having the right friends. A friend of mine, Luis Contreras (Last Man Standing), is an actor. We did about ten things together. He’d been up for the part of Diaz and he called me up one night, drunk as a skunk, crying. “I think I blew it. The producer, Joel Silver, doesn’t like me. But you should go after the part.” So I sat there thinking about it, and I got a picture from my scene in Scarface – of me and the other guy in the Babylon Club and we’re shooting up the place. I sent it to [Jackie Birch] the casting director [for Commando] and I wrote, “Dear Jackie, You’re my favorite hit – Carlos.” The next day my agent called me and said, “They want to see you for Commando.”

I walk into the office and Jackie Birch says to me, “I got your picture, it’s clever. We’re still looking for Diaz.” So she read me for Diaz right then and there in the office, and then [after a couple hours] I met Mark Lester, the director and read for him. He said, “Thanks very much,” and I walked out. I didn’t hear anything for two weeks, and then my agent called me – something about them wanting to know if I can put some kind of toupee on or something to match the stunt guy. And I’m thinking, “What the hell is that? You don’t get an actor to match a stunt guy, you get a stunt guy to match an actor.” But my agent said they wanted to see me again, so I go in, and Jackie’s there, and she says, “Carlos, I want you to meet the stunt coordinator.” And he asks, “Have you shot machine guns and guns?” I go, “Yeah, I was in Scarface,” and this and that. And he nods to Jackie. And just then the director walks in and says, “Carlos, what are you doing here?” And I said, “Well, you guys called me and said you wanted to see me again.” And he said, “No, no. I saw fifty guys. When you walked in, you had the part. You got the job.”

So right then and there I had the job.


Q: What was it like working with Arnold?

DUKE: He’s a great dude, man. No ego. Totally professional. Prepared. Just committed. It was one of the best experiences I’ve had, on both Commando and Predator. He’s a good person.

KELLY: Arnold was really great. He was a wonderful guy who gave me a lot of advice about stuff. He was very humble about his acting. He would go to the dailies and then he’d talk about the different scenes [with me]. I remember he used to talk of meeting Maria Shriver, and he used to talk about his mother, who I met, actually. I met Arnold’s mother, and I also met his best friend from childhood, who was still around and part of his posse.

CERVANTES: I remember meeting Arnold up at the cabin. We filmed up at Mount Baldy in the mountains. I saw him standing across the way with his buddy, Sven[-Ole Thorsen], that big, giant stunt actor. Huge guy. Much bigger than Arnold. And I thought, “Arnold doesn’t look that big.” The assistant director wanted to introduce us, so we’re walking across the set, getting closer to Arnold, and yeah man, he is big. He’s huge! He’s standing next to Sven, who was like a foot taller, and maybe 270. So yeah, I got to meet Arnold and he was great. Making Commando was a real special time. And he took off, man. Who would’ve thought he would become such a huge star and accomplish everything that he did?

Q: How did it feel to die at his hands?

DUKE: The only reason he kicked my butt is because I got paid [laughs].

Q: [laughs] Good answer.

CERVANTES: Oh, it was great, man. I was so into that. I was so high just watching it. I remember when they printed it, the producer and director looked at Arnold, and he said, “Terrific!” You could tell that was it – that we’d nailed it.

When we shot it, they had me in the rocking chair and they hooked a wire to it, and the wall behind me wasn’t a real wall. We shot that part in a studio, so it was made of balsa wood, just in case I hit it. They shot a pellet at my head, and three or four grips just yanked that rocking chair I was in. They’d cut the back legs off. When they pulled me back, boom – I hit the wall. I got up and they started talking about another take, and I said, “Guys, you got one take. That was it [laughs].” 

I didn’t want to do stunts, man. I wanted to act. But we did it in one take, and it ended up in the trailer, so that was it. And it was just awesome, man.

Q: When you really think about it, the death of Diaz is actually one of the most important deaths in the film. Even though he doesn’t have a lot of screen time, his death signifies that John Matrix isn’t messing around. Diaz is so cocksure in front of Matrix and taunting him about his daughter; he feels safe from reprisal, only for him to get his head blown off. That really goes a long way in summing up Matrix’s motivation as a character. He’s not going to negotiate, and he’s not going to mellow out. Diaz basically tells him, “We don’t need guns” and Matrix replies, “Yeah, we do.”

CERVANTES: Yeah, it was great because it was so unexpected. It was a total change from the standard, like [instead of Matrix asking], “Okay, what do I have to do?”

You know, I was in the gym once doing bench presses, and a guy walks up to me and goes, “You died too early in Commando.” That was it. And he walked away.

Q: [laughs]

CERVANTES: I was like, “Wait, come back, man!” I couldn’t believe it. “Yeah! I did die too early!” Son of a gun…


KELLY: [Sully’s death] was a great scene, and it was well prepared. I was on a big cable. I had a harness that went up my leg. It took a long time. I give a lot of thanks to Bennie Dobbins, who was a great stunt man at the time – he passed away [in 1988] – but he harnessed me up there. It was just him, and another guy down below on the cliff who caught me after we did it two times. It took about six hours to film that whole thing.

Q: David, I’m not sure if you’re aware of this, but Sully has become such a popular character. At times he even surpasses John Matrix in popularity—

KELLY: [laughs]

Q: —and so the death of Sully is a highlight for all kinds of reasons. Were you aware that Sully had such a rabid cult following?

KELLY: No! I’m just kind of hearing about it now. I knew that people responded to the movie and remembered it. They say that line to me quite often – not as much as “Warriors, come out to play!” but they say, “I promised to kill you last.” I’ve never done autograph shows or those kinds of particular venues. I prefer venues like this to talk about these things, because I understand that people are interested in them on a deeper level. I respect those autograph shows and the fans that come, but it’s not my thing.

I based Sully on two former mercenary guys who were charged with protecting Robert Vesco, who died a few years ago in exile, in Cuba. He was a fundraiser for Nixon, but he had done these financial shenanigans. He made millions before Bernie Madeoff did. This guy was doing it way back in the ‘70s, and maybe earlier than that. He was doing these shell-game financial things and he ended up being pursued by the government, and he ended up in exile – first in Costa Rica, and then in Cuba – and he had this mercenary squad who protected him. I had seen an interview on 60 Minutes with these guys, and I thought that was a fascinating backstory for Sully – to be hired by the dictator guy. That’s where that came from; that’s who he’s based on. There’s an important book written by Christopher Dickey about Nicaragua and the contras [With the Contras: A Reporter in the Wilds of Nicaragua], and the CIA’s work to fight against them. In the 1980s, there was the Freedom of Information Act, and so you got to see manuals that the CIA put out to help overthrow the rebels in South America. These were really interesting to read as background for possible scenarios in Commando. So, as cartoony as it was, it was based on real stuff that was going on in the Reagan America at the time.

Q: Within the context of the film, Sully’s background makes a lot of sense. When you look at the group of guys they got together to play the villains, most of them were pretty much the brawns, but Sully was the money guy. He didn’t need the brawns, because he was more of the intelligence gatherer.

KELLY: Yeah, and there’s the scene where he makes the deal for the illegal passports before the big chase scene with Arnold – before Sully meets his demise – so you’re right. Though you never find out what Sully was going to do with those passports, it was for some kind of terrorist something or other! [laughs]


Q: Do you all have a favorite line from the film, whether it was one of yours or that of someone else?

CERVANTES: [Impersonating Arnold] “Sully, remember when I promised to kill you last?” “That’s right, you did!” “I LIED.”

DUKE: “I eat green berets for breakfast!”

Q: I was hoping you’d pick that one.

KELLY: Steven E. de Souza and the director, Mark Lester, let me improvise a lot of my dialogue that Sully says, especially with Rae Dawn Chong, and at the deal-making session where Sully is buying the illegal IDs.

Q: David, I have to ask you: during that scene in the mall when you’re buying the illegal passports, you sort of offhandedly mention to the guy you’re meeting, “This used to be a great place for hunting slash.” Was that improvved?

KELLY: Yeah, that was me. I put that in. I always have music on in the background for my characters, and the song that was sort of everywhere at that time was Sade’s “Smooth Operator.” That’s who this guy thought he was. He just travels around, does his business, and gets what he can on every level. So that was his worldview, which is pretty demented and perverse.

Q: You can tell just by the way Sully saunters around on screen that he’s sexually aggressive, and he thinks very highly of himself.

KELLY: That’s right. So we put that one in, and then the dialogue with Arnold when Sully meets his demise at the hilltop. That was at Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, which is famous because that’s where Rebel Without a Cause was filmed, with James Dean and Dennis Hopper. It was the same place where they had the big knife fight – where Arnold was holding me by the foot. That was near another cinematic shrine.


Q: Looking back on Commando, whether at the finished film or of your time on set, what do you first think of?

DUKE: That Commando was one of my first real bad guys. It was an opportunity to work with Joel Silver, who went on to do incredible things, and so did the director. Everyone went on to do great things, you know? It was an experience that I felt very fortunate to be a part of.

CERVANTES: Oh man, it’s Arnold. I remember I was smoking a cigar on the set – just a regular cigar. And he goes [imitating Arnold], “Oh, you smoke?” And he tells some guy on set to bring him a cigar, and he brings back this giant cigar. The thing looked like a stick of dynamite. And he had a cutter that looked like pliers. So that was cool, sitting with Arnold and having a cigar with him.

KELLY: I think of that Porsche – which wasn’t really a Porsche, since they had to wreck it. It was a Volkswagen, I believe, with the shell of a Porsche over top of it.

CERVANTES: I also remember I was supposed to do the Cadillac scene in the car dealer. That’s what I read for. And Joel Silver changed it on the day of the shoot, and I was like, “Aw man, what are you talking about? That was like…my scene.” And he goes, “Well, you know: a black guy…Cadillac.” Aw, jeeze.

Q: [laughs] Oh no. That’s so, so bad, but you almost have to laugh because that’s perfectly typical Hollywood rationale.

CERVANTES: Yeah, and he tells me this on-set! It was a six a.m. call at the Cadillac set to film it. So I had to sit there and watch them film the scene, because I was needed for something later that night – the trash truck stuff. And my stunt guy, who was going to be driving through the window, ended up doubling the guy who was on top of the car. Yeah, Joel… “What the? Are you kidding?” But I couldn’t rock the boat.

Q: From now on, every time I watch that scene, I’m going to picture Diaz sitting in that Cadillac instead.

CERVANTES: Yeah, Diaz, with that puffy jacket!

So that was a total bummer, because that was such a great scene. But I still got to do what I got to do. It turned out to be a great experience.

As it turned out, I got lucky, because Joel Silver put me in the trailer. “You’re gonna cooperate, right?” “Wrong.” Boom. And that little commercial got me so much work. Suddenly I was a hitman in so many movies, getting killed, killing people, getting beat up. It was fun! And I made good money.

Thirty years later, I’ve done a hundred movies, and it all goes back to Commando. I think, “Wow, if I hadn’t put that stamp on that envelope and mailed it…”


KELLY: Because you were talking about the fans and the people who appreciate it, I’m going to share something very personal now. For a period of time, from the time Commando first came out until about ten to fifteen years afterward, I had a little fan named Jamie, from Philadelphia, who had spina bifida, a very serious spinal nervous disorder – you’re always in and out of the hospital – and he was just an exceptional fan. And like you were saying, and I’m very humbly grateful to you for saying it, he saw me as the lead in the movie, and he talked about how Rae Dawn was Sully’s girlfriend. He was just a little boy. His father just cherished him – took him to things, and showed him Commando because Arnold was just an amazing heroic figure. But Jamie really became enchanted by Sully. I have to think there was something in Arnold holding me up in that way, which is so mythic, and so in his own disorder, his own disease, he identified with that somehow. So he came to visit me – his father brought him all the way to New York City – we had lunch at the Plaza Hotel. He wore a little suit, which looked like Sully’s suit, and his father bought him a toy yellow Porsche. To see that there is something in your work beyond the horrific characters that can touch someone – that means something to them, that there’s something they can take away from it – that’s what I think of when I think about Commando. I think about Jamie. Unfortunately, I think it was about ten years ago that he passed away. I went to his funeral and I sang an old Bob Dylan song, “He Was a Friend of Mine.” It was very moving.

Q: That’s amazing.

KELLY: People, over the years, have identified with that and recognized that, and saw beyond the horrific characters – and they are terrible, terrible characters – that we were trying to reflect something of the world that exists and tell the story of how someone can be heroic in the midst of that. If you can help do that, and if people identify with that, it really is just the whole reason for doing this.

Q: The shooting of the film made it look like everyone was having a great time. Everyone on screen had great chemistry.

DUKE: Commando was fun. It was – it was a good time. We had a good director and good people. It’s hard enough to do anyway, but it’s ten times harder when there’s drama. But there was no drama.

CERVANTES: Times like that, and even now when I’m on a big movie, it’s like going to Disney World. It’s so nice to be part of something that you know is going to last through the decades.

KELLY: I really enjoyed the crew: the late Bennie Dobbins, the great stunt man, who worked with me on 48 Hours; the great Matt Leonetti, who did the cinematography on 48 Hours; [composer] James Horner, who eventually won the Academy Award for Titanic – he did both 48 Hours and Commando; Mark Lester, who was very gracious.

I just think about those times, you know? Arnold was the id monster for the Reagan era. He was the dream of “We’re gonna solve the problems around the world, and if we have to do it ourselves, we’ll do it.”


Q: Charles Meshack, who played Henriques, died in 2006. What are your memories of him?

CERVANTES: I never met him on the set, but I did meet him later on at something. Maybe it was at the studio or at the screening, I don’t remember. But no, I never got the chance to work with him on set, unfortunately.

DUKE: Talented, funny, and committed. Very clear and committed to his craft. He’d joke around, but when the camera came on, he was a totally different person. We’re losing a lot of good folks, you know?

KELLY: He was a very quiet fellow. We were filming in 1985 at the LAX airport – that’s where we filmed our scene together – and it turned out that Charles Meshack was a decorated Vietnam War veteran. And it was in 1985 when they finally had a parade in lower Manhattan to welcome home, all these years later, all the Vietnam veterans. And he was very moved by that, so he started talking to me about it. We were filming the scene where Arnold gets on the plane when we saw on the TV that this parade was going on, and he said, “I was there, and there were some really terrible, terrible things that went on.” And he told me about some of those things. It was really a watershed for those veterans. I always felt really amazed by him – how he’d survived and gone into acting, so…it’s all props to Charles Meshack.

Q: I was reading up on Charles beforehand and there is very little information out there about him, so I wonder how many people knew about his history beyond those who were close acquaintances of his.

KELLY: I wanted to personalize our relationship in the dialogue [we shared]. I give it to Steven de Souza – he gives you the opportunity by writing this script and putting all these situations together so you can improvise a little bit within them. Shakespeare has these little subplots that sort of echo the main plot, so I improvised a little bit about my “old war buddy, Henriques.” I don’t quite remember the exact line, but it was something like, “there’s nothing like old war buddies,” about the two of us when we’re walking into the airport. I wanted to build up our relationship a bit and I remember Charles being really happy about that – about the fact that we weren’t just bodies walking through there. So we talk about “old war buddies,” but then you see that [kind of relationship] blown up to when it becomes Bennett and Matrix. But Sully and Henriques were at least on the same side.

Q: What was your impression of the film while you were working on it? Did you think it would be just another action film, or did you have a suspicion that it would go on to amass such a huge appreciation and still have people talking about it thirty years later?

DUKE: I guess the business people knew, but I don’t think any of us knew it would go on to become what it became. As actors, we’re there to do a job, but we’re not the editor or the director or the producer. We’re just there doing our job – it’s another gig. But the studio did a good job of marketing it. They did a good job with the music. All aspects of it, really. The feedback we got was incredible – from friends and everyone else. It was one of those experiences that an actor lives for, because, not only for that film, but it helps you get work in other things.

But nobody really knew. Everybody hoped, but nobody really knew.

Q: I think when you’re working on a film, you can tell that it’s special, but no one can ever really know if something is going to capture the kind of lightning in a bottle that most artists hope for.

DUKE: That’s right. That’s the truth. You can speculate, right? You can do your best, but… If it hits at the right time with the right audience, that’s a whole other situation.


CERVANTES: Well, Arnold had just taken off. The Terminator, I believe, had just come out and was going through the roof. I’d seen Arnold’s other films – the Conans and all that. I hadn’t seen The Terminator yet, but I’d heard the buzz. The buzz was huge. I remember Joel Silver running to the set with a Variety and saying, “Look at these numbers! Arnold’s going to be a huge star! We gotta finish this movie!” And I remember them at night doing dailies – I could hear it through the wall, it was on the other side of my dressing room. And I could hear Joel Silver talking about it. “We gotta wrap this up. Cut this scene and cut that scene.”

So I thought, “I think I’m on to something here.” Just from the way everyone treated me, and the atmosphere on the set, I thought, “This is going to be big, man.”

We finished shooting in June of ’85 and it was theatrically released in October of the same year – and they never do that. They were just pumping it out to jump on Arnold’s notoriety. And Commando only made $35 million in the United States, but it made $70 million overseas [$151 million adjusted for inflation]. It established Schwarzenegger as a major international star.

They had the screening at Fox Studios. It was funny, my brother-in-law, wife, and sister-in-law were there. Afterwards, [my brother-in-law and I] go into the bathroom and we’re at the urinals. There’s maybe ten of them in there. Some guy steps up in between us…and it’s Clint Eastwood [laughs]. Clint Eastwood, man! He must’ve been [at the screening] checking out the competition.

Q: Oh, wow.

CERVANTES: Yeah! But I didn’t ask to shake his hand. [laughs]

Man, I remember when the DVD first came out – just the DVD. I was at Walmart and they had this big cardboard cutout of Arnold from Commando, with all his movies on DVD. I was standing there looking at it and this little kid walks in with his mom and says, “Oh man, Commando! I want it!” So his mother gets it and puts it in her cart. And someone else comes over. “Oh, Commando! I gotta have that!” I thought, “Wow!” Two people bought it during those two minutes I was standing there. It was amazing.

That movie, thirty years later, people still play it over and over again.


KELLY: I think there are a lot of reasons why people relate to it still. There are some really great performances. Rae Dawn Chong was such a charming leading lady. It was the first movie that, I believe, tried to humanize Arnold, like in John Wick, that offered just a basic story that everyone could relate to. And who can’t relate to someone wanting to rescue their child? So it’s this really elemental thing that continues to make people watch it and be interested in it. I know the style was cartoony – well, Arnold is kind of cartoony anyway, just because of what he’s achieved – but there are other reasons, too. [Writer] Steven E. de Souza was very much into political conscience and scenarios of things that could possibly happen, you know, so it pre-stages a lot of stuff that’s still important to the world, whether it’s about mercenaries – and mercenaries are just everywhere these days. And Sully and his gang are these ex-guys and Matrix was a former Special Forces guy. And all these independent armies are doing things for these mercenary reasons around the world now. So I think that’s one of the reasons people still think about it.


Q: Rumors have persisted for a while that 20th Century Fox has been pursuing a remake of Commando [which most recently had Sabotage director David Ayer attached]. How do you react to that?

DUKE: Well, I’m old school and old fashioned, and to me, there are certain things…

I understand the business component of it. There are all kinds of things being remade now, you know? But like I said, I’m old school and old fashioned, and why remake it? You know, why remake It’s a Wonderful Life? Why remake The Godfather? I guess that’s just old-fashioned stuff, but I believe in classics.

Q: It’s easy to remake a film, but you can seldom recapture the kind of magic that makes that film special.

DUKE: Yeah! I feel that. I think there’s something that happens at a point – the right combination of people, the right actors and producers and the director – you shouldn’t touch it.

My daughter, and her generation, thinks I’m crazy. [laughs]

They think, “Why not? Why not redo it?”

CERVANTES: [A remake would be] kind of weird, because Arnold was so much a part of that movie. If you remake it, it’s not Commando. Walter Hill, the director, told me once that he was going to remake The Magnificent Seven, and I was going to have a nice part in it. But later on he said, “I’m not doing it. I can’t do a better job [than the original], so I’m letting it go.”

I mean, who would you get [for Commando]? A karate guy? The Rock? It would be more of the same.

DUKE: It’s almost like [the belief is] anything can be replicated and that’s not my particular belief. There are certain things… Take Miles Davis, or take Tony Bennett, who is one of my favorite singers of all time. He’s in his ‘80s or something and he’s still got chops. When Tony Bennett goes, there’s not going to be another. There’ll be other singers, but how do you replicate Tony Bennett or Whitney Huston or Frank Sinatra or Pavarotti? They have a certain magic, and how do you explain that magic? How do you replicate it?

There are certain things…leave ‘em alone.

KELLY: I think it has been remade, in many, many forms, for thirty years. I think the Bourne movies and the Transporter movies owe a bit to it. Some of Tarantino’s. I think a prequel would be interesting. Where did all those guys come from before the story of Commando?

CERVANTES: There had been rumors, a long time ago, there was going to be a sequel, but it never happened. I don’t know why, because Commando made money.

Q: What do you all have coming up next?

DUKE: I’m directing a number of things now. We just finished a TV pilot called Blexicans, which you guys will hopefully see on TV in the next year or so. I was in Chicago for a while working on that. I’m working on developing my own content and those kinds of things.

CERVANTES: Well, I did [season two, episode two, of] True Detective, where I get my ass kicked, and I just did an episode of Murder in the First. It’s the last episode of season two. It should air either late August or early September. It’s on TNT; I think they did twelve of them. There’s a chance I could come back. I play a fat cat political guy in a suit. I’m doing a lot of suit guys now. I wore a suit in True Detective, even though I was getting my ass kicked.

Q: David, Lionsgate is going ahead with John Wick 2. Will we see the return of Charlie the clean-up man?

KELLY: I hope so! There’s a lot of work to do for John Wick. He takes care of business, and he’s got to have his reliable team there. It was a great deal of fun with those guys. No one has called me yet, but Charlie survived, and I still have the gold coins in the other room, so I hope so.

Q: Last question: If I were to tell you that I’ve watched Commando more than a hundred times, what would you say to me?

CERVANTES: [laughs] Well, I would say that I understand how you can, because I have movies that are personal favorites and I could watch them a hundred times. And I probably have. Like Scarface. Christmas Vacation. I’ve seen Commando at least a hundred times – maybe not in its entirety, but my kids, they loved it, because when I did it, they were young. And they watched it, and got older and watched it again. It’s always on TV, man, and I’ll stop and watch some of it. So I understand.

KELLY: Watching it a hundred times is amazing. It makes me happy that people can find interesting details and appreciate the work that goes into movies. All of those involved go their separate ways developing their skills and when it all comes together to make something people want to see again and again, well, that’s wonderful. It’s like a painter whose work can be appreciated and grow in value as time goes on.

DUKE: [laughs] I think you have good taste! And thank you. Thank you.