(Image credit) |
Lou Diamond Phillips plays a
different sort of outlaw than we have seen him play before, a biker who heads
up a gang of motorcycle misfits called the Iron Bandits. When we first meet the
gang at their clubhouse in Idaho, the first thing Bart (Lou) and his boys do is
kill a state trooper. (Note: Lou wears a very interesting pair of bright
yellow boxer shorts with a Wal-Mart smiley face licking its chops on the front).
Bart meets our hero John (Sean Patrick Flanery) when the gang rolls into Profit,
Montana. John works at the local pioneer reenactment village with his buddies and ex-girlfriend. With the help of another Iron Bandit, Bart robs the bar where John is getting a few drinks after a day of playing cowboy. The biker also nearly beats bartender Smoky to death and threatens John to keep his mouth shut.
Profit is so small that there are only two cops who John, our Wild
West show bad guy and real life hero, calls once he cuffs the bikers with the
help of a gun that shoots blanks. He's helped by ex-girlfriend Sharon, who
is expecting to leave town soon to attend UCLA for the fall semester.
John is everyone's friend at the reenactment village
until the Iron Bandits close in on the failing attraction, seeking revenge on
behalf of their embarrassed leader. Smoky's friends just want to go on with their
lives without any trouble.
John's closest friend is the
park's grizzled trick shooter Gus, a guy with a shady past who gives our
hero a hand shutting down the bad guys. Though fearless and intelligent, Bart
is still a thug and must, in the end, be put down. Bart has killed cops. He
almost killed Smoky and doesn't want to leave loose ends, namely John and
Sharon.
Most of the movie involves John and Sharon trying to stay
alive with Gus's help while the Iron Bandits try to wipe them off the face of
the earth. The movie is a basic good prevails over evil tale, which leaves us
with a sense of satisfaction. There are a lot of tense scenes that get your
adrenaline pumping. Bart's continuous chatter also jangles the nerves.
No lawmen, a reluctant hero, a steadfast older friend,
deck stacked against the good guys, and plenty of shooting. Good action, good
emotional triggers for a low-budget movie. It leaves the viewer satisfied that
all is right with the world.