Active Stealth

1999

Action / Adventure / Crime / War

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Andrew Stevens Photo
Andrew Stevens as Capt. Jack Stevens
Shannon Whirry Photo
Shannon Whirry as Gina Murphy
Daniel Baldwin Photo
Daniel Baldwin as Capt. Murphy
Terry Funk Photo
Terry Funk as Morgan
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
913.5 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S ...
1.66 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S 1 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Enchorde3 / 10

Bad

Recap: After a failed diplomatic mission were Captain Murphy himself was held hostage, a rescue team is sent. Able to free the captives but, Murphy's friend, and the leader of the rescue team, Rifkin is wounded and left behind. Later the team get a video showing Rifkin held hostage by the drug lord Salvatore. Now it seems they will get a third and final shot at rescuing their man, and taking out Salvatore. To give them an edge, they have a modified Stealth Fighter, able to carry personnel, that will fly them into the (fictive) South American Country.

Comments: Clearly an attempt to put together an hour and a half of action and little more. Barely to keep the story floating. There are two major problems though. First off, as often in these kind of movies, the soldiers are under-equipped and clearly not trained. In most firefights people, mostly bad guys, drop like flies. But had there been real ammo, I doubt they would have hit the same village. The second problem is that Stealth Fighters must be hard to come by. Although the fighting is set in a dry and warm country in South America, most pictures show the Stealth flying over a snow-covered landscape.

Both problems make it hard to take the movie seriously. But then again, we are not really supposed to do that anyway, are we? If one are willing, and able, to ignore those problems, this is a decent low-budget action. If you're not, you will probably want to skip this one...

3/10

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca4 / 10

Military action on a budget

ACTIVE STEALTH is a military action film from B-movie purveyor Fred Olen Ray, who along with Charles Band must have made some of the silliest (and cheapest) movies of recent years. This one's a predictable action flick in which American stealth pilots go after the warlord of a made-up South American country and must rescue some kidnapped US hostages in the mean time.

As is the norm for one of these films - most of which seem to have been directed by Ray or Jim Wynorski - a lot of the more impressive action highlights have been lifted from other movies, CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER among them; this accounts for pretty much all of the aerial combat in this film. The stuff on the ground is a little more fun, with lots of cheesy macho dialogue, chest-thumping, and slow-motion shoot-outs with various goons.

The film features a laidback performance from Daniel Baldwin (recently of CELEBRITY BIG BROTHER fame, which says everything, and the least famous of the four brothers) as the tough hotshot, and he's supposed by a cast of the usual B-movie stereotypes. Watch out for a couple of old-timers, Andrew Stevens and Fred Williamson, playing officials. ACTIVE STEALTH is a pretty poor film but it's never boring, so it's far from the worst of this genre.

Reviewed by tarbosh220002 / 10

It's pretty much the dictionary definition of shelf filler.

When an evil Mexican drug lord (is there any other kind?) named Salvatore (Lala) and his henchman Morgan (Funk) take a member of our U.S. military hostage, we bring in the best men we have available to go on the rescue mission. Of course, that includes Captain "Murph" Murphy (Baldwin),a sullen and somewhat belligerent man who is haunted by his past. His wife Gina (Whirry) is supportive, but along with Chiccio (Vennera),Lt. Reb Carter (Abell),and "Hollywood" Andrews - because he wants to make it in Hollywood after his military career is over - (Robinson),the boys snap into action and use the awesome new stealth bomber for said mission. They even get help from "Special Guest" Andrew Stevens as Jack Stevens. Whoa. While south of the border, they make friends with a peasant woman and her young son as they find out Salvatore wants to "El Presidente" himself all the way to the top. Paralleling that back home, Captain Reynolds (Williamson) just may be part of conspiracy that also goes to the top.

Here we go again...if Stealth Fighter (1999),Desert Thunder (1999),Crash Dive (1996),its sequel Counter Measures (1999),Agent Red (2000),Air Rage (2001),and all the other Fred Olen Ray or Jim Wynorski-styled plane slogs from the late 90's/early 2000's weren't enough for you, well, here's another one. Not only does this not add anything to the genre, it actually takes away entertaining elements from the other ones. For example, there's no precocious kid like a Sarah Dampf to at least make us chuckle here. We do get an Italian stereotype in Chiccio, but it's just not the same.



It's not the "borrowed" footage from other movies that bothers us. We're used to that by now. It's the fact that this is a plane slog crossed with an El Presidente slog, two of our least favorite slogs. Just simply stitching them together does not a good movie make. It even knocks off one of our favorites, Commando (1985),with Lala and Funk taking on the Dan Hedaya and Vernon G. Wells roles respectively. There is a ton of groan-inducing dialogue, from the constant military jargon (a lot of which is inaccurate, from what we've been able to ascertain),to the noticeably-more-obvious-than-usual homosexual references when our heroes are trying to "bond". It all will make you long for the glory of Delta Force Commando II: Priority Red One (1990).

And speaking of Fred Williamson, the star of the aforementioned film, let's face it, this movie is unworthy of his talents. He's not in it that much, but it even manages to tamp down and tame The Hammer. Not good. Daniel Baldwin puts in a perfunctory performance but seems more interested whenever there's dialogue involving chili (there's more than you might think). While casting Terry Funk as one of the baddies was a good idea, we would have liked to have seen Shannon Whirry in more than just the clichéd "worried wife" role. She should have taken a rocket launcher down to Mexico to blow up Salvatore. Then we'd be talking.

Sure, there's a bunch of mindless shooting, and some helicopters "blow up" (is this stuff even real anymore?) but it's very, very hard - if not impossible - to care. The Top Gun video game for Nintendo was more entertaining and well-made than this. It's pretty much the dictionary definition of shelf filler. The Stealth may be active but your brain cells will be inactive if you witness this muck.

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