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poster of Cyborg
Rating: 5.7/10 by 717 users

Cyborg (1989)

A martial artist hunts a killer in a plague-infested urban dump of the future.

Directing:
  • Albert Pyun
  • Michael Katleman
  • Jon Paré
  • Barbara D'Alessandro
  • Tom Elliott
Writing:
  • Albert Pyun
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Apr 07, 1989

Rating: 5.7/10 by 717 users

Alternative Title:
Masters of the Universe 2: Cyborg - US
Kyborg - CZ
爆力戰士 - CN
Slinger - US
سایبورگ - IR

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 26 minutes
Budget: $500,000
Revenue: $10,166,459

Plot Keyword: future, new york city, martial arts, cyborg, post-apocalyptic future, mercenary, cyberpunk, anarchy, action hero, manhunt, vengeance

Jean-Claude Van Damme
Gibson Rickenbacker
Deborah Richter
Nady Simmons
Vincent Klyn
Fender Tremolo
Alex Daniels
Marshall Strat
Ralf Moeller
Brick Bardo
Dayle Haddon
Pearl Prophet
Blaise Loong
Furman Vux / Pirate / Bandit
Jackson 'Rock' Pinckney
Tytus / Pirate / Bandit
Robert Pentz
Base / Pirate / Bandit
Sharon K. Tew
Prather / Pirate / Bandit
Chuck Allen
Vondo / Pirate / Bandit
Stefanos Miltsakakis
Xylo / Pirate / Bandit
Jophery C. Brown
Saloon Owner / Pirate / Bandit
Matt McColm
Pirate / Bandit
Tommy Evans
Pirate / Bandit
Bill Morrison
Pirate / Bandit
Tim Gilbert
Pirate / Bandit
Bruce Frye
Pirate / Bandit
O.D. Wilson
Pirate / Bandit
Michael Halford
Pirate / Bandit
Johnny Grady Jr.
Pirate / Bandit
James Irwin
Pirate / Bandit
Karen Spell
Pirate / Bandit
Jim Creech
Roland Pick
Dale Frye
Sather / Pirate / Bandit
Nena Barley
Mother of Boy Bouncing Ball (uncredited)
Patrick Barley
Boy Bouncing Ball (uncredited)

Kenneth Axel Carlsson

I remember seeing this movie in my youth, back when it was normal to make movies like this. Back then, the stars were named Stallone, Van Damme and Schwarzenegger, and no matter what they did, they couldn't go wrong. We all wanted to be like these. Today, luckily stars need acting skills and not just muscles and a bit of martial art skill. In fact, had this movie been made today, it might even have been a masterpiece to be compared to such post-apocalyptic movies as Children of Men and The Road. Lets take a brief look at the story, because there is a story hidden here somewhere. We are in The States, a world that has been destroyed completely by anarchy, genocide and starvation, a world where the plague has spread, keeping the population down to an absolute minimum. Somewhere, scientists have found a cure, though, a cure that everyone wants, for good or bad. A cyborg named Pearl is sent into the world to retrieve this cure, and at the beginning of the movie, we learn that she has found it and is taking it back to the doctors who created her. A cyborg, by the way, is a man (or woman) who have been so heavily implemented with cybernetics that they could no longer be recognized as being humans. Pearl is taken by Fender, a madman who also kicks off the movie as our narrator, explaining how he enjoys this new world. Gibs (played by Van Damme) briefly encounters the cyborg, but is really only interested in killing Fender. Those two have a dark past, a past that Gibs (or Gibson) relives throughout the movie in long flashbacks. He was once charged to get a small family to safety outside the city, but Fender interfered and tried to kill them. Now he even has one of the children, a girl named Haley, among his pirates. Gibson is followed by another girl, one named Nady. She is interested in the cure even though Gibs care little for this. They are unlikely travelling companions, but starts out on a big journey towards Atlanta, hoping to catch up with Fender and Pearl, to get revenge... and the cure. Along the way, they encounter many dangers, and finally catch up with the pirates. Cyborg is a low budget movie that tries too hard. Just take a look at the first scene, in New York. Less is more, and if only the director would have remembered that. If only I had had the option to remove the music, then I might actually have enjoyed the movie a little, but no, there is music in nearly all scenes, with only a few exceptions. Music that wants us to feel certain things, and that wants us to be prepared for what is coming. If only we were talking about a beautiful score by Hans Zimmer, but alas, we are not. So why do I ask if this is a failure, or a masterpiece? Well, what if the director deliberately used poor actors, to tell us something of the human race. What if he wanted us to think that all humans in this future were somehow cyborgs, part man, part machine? Unfortunately, this is not so, the director wants us to feel something for Gibs, Nady, Haley and Pearl, and therefore he makes them all human, a humanity that their acting skills cannot handle. Alas, this is not a masterpiece in any way, but a big failure, a movie with a tolerable plot, but that fails to deliver it in a believable way. _Last words... my only star goes to the two beautiful paintings of New York and Atlanta that we see in the beginning and end of the movie. These are hauntingly beautiful, but unfortunately, the rest of the movie... is not._

CinemaSerf

Nope, this is not good and we might as well get that out of the way first. Jean-Claude Van Damme does, however, manage to show off his rippled torso quite frequently whilst everyone else just shows off the fact that they can't act and that even if they could, the dialogue is so pathetic that they'd decided not to bother learning their lines. He's "Gibson", a retired fighter who has to come to terms with an apocalyptic scenario that has reduced these United States to rubble ruled on the basis of survival of the fittest by the "Pirates". Scientists in Atlanta might be onto to a cure for this pestilence, but for that to work then cyborg/human combo "Pearl" (Dayle Haddon) has to get some information to them. Meantime, the well informed gang leader "Tremolo" (Vincent Klyn) wants the cure for his people instead and so rather easily captures her. With the pieces all in place "Gibson" and his feisty new friend "Nady" (Deborah Richter) have to fight the ostensibly un-winnable fight against overwhelming odds to try and rescue "Pearl". There's not the merest hint of jeopardy here and the action scenes are so badly choreographed and edited together that it makes "Conan" (1982) look like Fellini. The repetition in the storyline really becomes irritating after the seventh scene when our hero is slashed to ribbons only to recuperate into an even more deadly ninja - and he's not even the robot. Auteur Albert Pyun clearly had too much time and money on his hands to waste on developing characters or story and what we are left with is unlikely to be on Van Damme's audition tape.


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