On Deadly Ground

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On Deadly Ground (R)
Directed by Steven Seagal
Produced by Steven Seagal
A. Kitman Ho
Julius R. Nasso
Written by Ed Horowitz
Robin Russin
Starring Steven Seagal
Bart the Bear
Michael Caine
Joan Chen
R. Lee Ermey
John C. McGinley
Music by Basil Poledouris
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) February 18, 1994
Running time 101 min
Language English, Native American
Budget $50M (US)
IMDb profile

On Deadly Ground is a 1994 environmental action-adventure film directed by and starring Steven Seagal, and co-starring, Bart the Bear, Michael Caine, Joan Chen, and John C. McGinley. It was produced by A Kitman Ho, Julius R. Nasso, and Seagal and distributed by Warner Bros. Studios.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Steven Seagal executes a deadly groin attack on an oil worker.
Steven Seagal executes a deadly groin attack on an oil worker.

Steven Seagal plays Forrest Taft, a specialist in dealing with oil drilling-related fires. Taft discovers that Aegis Oil, his employer, is using faulty equipment on a new refinery in Alaska and is covering up the fact. He later discovers that the reason is so that the land doesn't revert back to the Eskimo tribes, which would cost Aegis Oil countless millions in revenue. Aegis' CEO, the arrogant Michael Jennings (Michael Caine) is, like Taft, a former member of an elite military unit. Jennings puts on a facade of caring for the environment and the Eskimo people, but, in reality couldn't care less about them.

Aegis engineer named Hugh Palmer (Richard Hamilton) has also come to the same conclusion and confides to Taft, suggesting he go public with the startling information. When Jennings learns of this he hires a group of mercenaries led by Stone (R. Lee Ermey) and MacGruder (John C. McGinley), who gets the henchman Otto (Sven-Ole Thorsen) to torture and murder Palmer. To get Taft out the way they set a trap for him. Although he is wounded, Taft survives and is rescued by Masu (Joan Chen) who's the daughter of Silook, the chief of her tribe.

Silook has Taft undergo a vision quest in which he sees the truth. When made to choose between two women, Steagal opts for the elderly, clothed grandmother, forgoing the erotically-charged nude eskimo seductress. Bart the Bear plays an unnamed character during this hallucination-allegory. Silook refers to Taft as a bear (obviously in a positive way) but Taft, out of shame for what he's been part of, however unwittingly, says: "No. I'm a mouse." Silook responds: "That's what the bear would say."

Taft, with Masu's help, assures that the refinery does not go on line, using Seagal's trademark blend of aikido and terrorism.

[edit] Criticisms

Departing from the usual action movie protocol, Forrest Taft does not have a traditional sidekick; rather Seagal's only foil is Masu, with whom he develops a romantic friendship, the norm for Steven Seagal's films.

Seagal as director and star of the film. This was Seagal's directorial debut.
Seagal as director and star of the film. This was Seagal's directorial debut.

Male anatomy takes center stage, but is strangely showcased without any (intentional) humor: Overdubbed sound portions of the first fight scene are notable for Taft's victims calling out the injured portions of their bodies ("my nuts!" and "my balls!"), as Taft puts them in their place. These voice tracks do not match the film, as the victims are either dazed or grimacing, and not visibly vocalizing. During this fight scene, the antagonist also vigorously refers to his own testicles as part of his display of confidence and fortitude.

On Deadly Ground was also criticized for using the context of an action-adventure film to promote an environmentalist message, by those on both sides of the issue. Some environmentalists criticized the film for excessive violence while some opposed to environmentalism criticized the message. The final scene, with Seagal giving a speech about the obsolescence of the internal combustion engine and the need for cleaner alternative fuels, was cut from its original 11 minute length before the film's release after audiences at initial screenings complained it was overlong and preachy.

Reviewer Michael Dequina of RottenTomatoes.com called it "a vanity project in the strongest sense of the term, this film has it all: bad acting, bad writing, bad direction, bad action sequences."

Upon release, On Deadly Ground met with generally poor critical reviews, largely because of perceived stereotyping of Native Americans and their spiritual beliefs. It earned $38.6M during its theatrical run.

Some audiences felt that the scene of Hugh Palmer being tortured and killed was too violent and sadistic. Other audiences did not comment on this.

Some film critics characterized the film as rehash of Billy Jack [1].

[edit] Trivia

  • Originally had titles of Rainbow Warrior and Spirit Warrior, but both were replaced shortly before release. [3]
  • It is rumored that the original cut of the film featured an 11-minute speech at the end by Seagal about pollution. Test audiences reportedly walked out during the closing speech and thus, the film was re-edited. [4]
  • The shotgun used by Forrest Taft in the assault on the refinery is a USAS-12*
  • Libby Riddles (first woman to win the Iditarod) worked on the set as a dog sledding coordinator.

[edit] External links

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