Sunday 11 January 2009

CANNIBAL MERCENARY (Thailand, 1983)

aka THE MERCENARY (US vhs)
aka EMPLOY FOR DIE (Thai vcd)
aka JUNGLE KILLERS - CANNIBAL MERCENARY (German dvd)
aka รับจ้างตาย (original title in Thai) 


"This story is told ... by the man who can not forget a brutal war"

VHS/USA/fullscreen/English dub/no subs/102m44s
[click scan for bigger size]

VCD/Thailand/fullscreen/Thai audio/no subs/original Thai version
[click scan for bigger size]



VHS (NTSC) (USA)
PVC (Public Video Company inc)
102.44 min.
fullscreen
English dubbing


REVIEW #1:


by Andrew Leavold

"This story is told... by a man who can not forget a brutal war!"

Around the time Antonio Margheriti was engaged in the unholy work of wedding the Vietnam War film with the cannibal genre in Cannibal Apocalypse (1980) and splicing the best bits of Apocalypse Now (1979) and The Deer Hunter (1978) into his blood soaked, shot-in-the-Philippines actioner The Last Hunter (1981), Thai filmmakers were also busy making their own demented backyard redux of Coppola's bloated paean to man's inhumanity. And oh, the inhumanity!

The film signposts its intentions early, through the overhead ceiling fan denoting "instant Vietnam flashback". Our hero - Namchoke? Prompit? Let's call him Wilson - has returned from a tour of duty and almost immediately is cajoled by his former commander to accept a mercenary job deep in the Vietnam jungle. It's not clear if the Vietnam War has ended, and even more unclear what a Sergeant in the Thai Army was doing there in the first place; nevertheless he needs the money for his daughter's polio operation and, since his wife was killed (cue blood-streaked flashback), they're both dependent on each other. So much for the sentiment. Onward, Buddhist Soldiers.

Wilson hits the Vietnam jungle running with a Mercenary squad under his command, a group of ugly Thai misfits with more than their share of chips on their shoulder. It's a treacherous trip up the figurative river, with the ever-present Viet Cong and their bamboo spiked traps executed in graphic, close-to-the-bone style, yet their most dangerous enemy, it's soon apparent amidst the spiraling paranoia, is themselves. After slashing and mutilating their way through a VC village they stumble on a pregnant Thai woman begging for their protection. With a cold, mean glare and a radio up her skirt, it seems she's leading them into an ambush, and succeeds with surprising ease in turning the men against each other. One private had riddled his wife and her lover with bullets, and thus wants to save the girl; another private, a relentless would-be-rapist, has his way with her - only to find his cock almost severed. Exit pregnant Thai in a hail of Wilson's pistol fire, and they carry off their mutilated buddy. Miraculously, he's cured twenty minutes later into the film, only to try the old "involuntary surprise sex" routine once more.

Wilson finally reaches his jungle contact, a glamorous commando named Choompah, but not before the rest of the squad are captured by Choompah's men, staked to the ground, and urinated on while her 2IC, an almost hairless, toothless and practically eyeless circus freak with a frotting fetish, rubs himself against one of his piss-stained victims. His disturbing bubble-head looked familiar; the actor turns out to be famous comedian Santhong Sisai - which translates to "ugly as sin"! - who was also a country singer and jailed in the Seventies for attempted murder. Which certainly didn't hurt his career, before his untimely death in a car accident around 1982. It's not the first pissing scene, either - but in a Thai film that throws in kung fu, cannibalism, outrageous gore and every conceivable 'Nam and post-'Nam cliches while making up a few of their own, a few bubble-headed toilet antics certainly aren't out of place.

Choompah fills in Wilson's remaining squad on their mission: to bring down a crazed VC Colonel (and it's at this moment when the Heart Of Darkness references tear though the grass roof) operating a drug empire - known as The Empire - out of a fortified camp guarded by flesh-eating aborigines - known as The Draculas! Once Wilson's men are captured, the film kicks into top gear and it's previous scenes of graphic mutilation and dismemberment are washed away in a river of gore. There's maggot licking, eyeball squishing, a knife through skull followed by a regulation cannibal chow-down on its contents, and seemingly endless rounds of ammunition tearing through flesh and bone: It's the ending you secretly dreamed of for Apocalypse Now, delivered by the trailer-load, yet somehow redeemed by its main offender's daughter wrapping her arms around him and gushing, "I wuv you daddy!" Awwww....

In addition to the Thai original and export versions, there's a THIRD titled Jungle Killers, edited by Hong Kong producer-hack Thomas Tang with much of the gore trimmed, but with the added bonus of three Euro-Trash actors looking for treasure. Looking for the Temple of Doom, perhaps? Move on , assholes. Make no mistake, Tang's Mercenary is to be avoided like the Plague, in favour of its longer, infinitely more excessive version. And yet, at over 1 hour 40 minutes, Mercenary is a fat-free exercise in cinematic brutality - a simpleminded one but not without its own dumb, animalistic, bludgeon-carrying charms. Its camera flourishes and manic montage leave little time between grotesque setpieces, thus allowing little time to contemplate just how primitive the soundtrack is. And I'm not just talking dialogue, with those regulation Hong Kong dubbing-booth Brits trying American accents and exaggerated Orientals (and Choompah's real voice replaced by Pam Ayres'). Even the foley and atmos tracks are poorly stitched, and the music a hodgepodge of library music and Goblin's Euro-score for Dawn Of The Dead (1978). No, we forgive its shortcomings because of the film's sheer onslaught of mind-bending imagery. The mud-daubed ghouls in denim, the Deer Hunter atrocities punted into Cannibal Holocaust (1978) territory, and above all, the blinking, puckering, rubbing form of Santhong Sisai frotting his way into our hearts and minds.


VCD/Thailand/Thai audio/no subs


REVIEW #2:


By Günter Müller (originally written for "Weird Asia")

CANNIBAL MERCENARY
aka THE MERCENARY
aka JUNGLE KILLERS - CANNIBAL MERCENARY
aka THE JAGUAR PROJECT



Thailand 1983
Directed by: Hong Lu Wong
Cast: Lek Songphon, Sugud Namchan, Rom Rachan, Sormud Charekchema...
Running Time: 103 min.

Ready for one of the most infamous and sought-after Asian exploitation flicks of all time? Yes? Fine! ‘Cause here it is, the notorious CANNIBAL MERCENARY, one of the goriest jungle shockers ever to hit the screen!


CANNIBAL MERCENARY tells the story of Wilson, a former soldier who scrape a bare living in a clinic and is haunted by memories of the horrible war he has taken part in. His only daughter is seriously ill and this makes him even more disillusioned. One day he is visited by a Colonel who offers him 500.000 dollars for a secret mission - for his native country, he adds earnestly. After a short time of hesitation he accepts the offer, mainly because with the money he is able to finance his daughter the much-needed operation. Soon he finds himself back in Vietnam, as a leader of a small group of mercenaries, and his first objective is to find his contact who will give him further details of the operation. The jungle turns out to be pure hell, full with kill-happy enemies, nasty booby-traps, dangerous animals and an unpleasant climate. The mood is extremely tense and the slightest spark can be the trigger to a terrible explosion, as all the guys are extremely irritated and their nerves strained to the limits.

Soon the group is decimated but the surviving mercenaries continue their mission unperturbed. Finally they meet a woman who turns out to be their contact person. After some more ordeals (some of the men are mistaken as enemies, tied to the ground, and pissed on) Wilson and his men have a breather in a small village, but not for long as the enemies are already informed of Wilson’s arrival and want nothing more than to get rid of him. Eventually the woman spills the beans and informs Wilson about his mission: he has to kill a certain disloyal Colonel who lives in this area and is the head of a well-organised drug trafficker organisation. How brutal and uncompromising this Colonel is can be seen in his camp where he tortures prisoners and slowly hangs them to death. And, as fate will have it, our group of mercenaries finally falls into the evil hands of the crazy Colonel, and to their horror they find out that most of the Colonel’s men are bloodthirsty cannibals who particularly like to feast on fresh human brains. So, once again, one question remains: who will survive and what will be left of them?

Before the film kicks off we can see an on-screen information that “this story is told... by a man who can not forget a brutal war!” This is followed by several images of war, like tanks rolling around, machine gun fire, and numerous explosions. Then the dark story slowly unfolds on the screen, bar the slightest trace of humour. We get to know the ‘hero’ of the piece, a disillusioned, cynical ex-soldier who voluntarily goes back to the horrors he can not forget in order to help his sick daughter. And as soon as Wilson enters the jungle we learn immediately that this is the kind of movie that makes no prisoners. “It’s either kill... or be killed” as one character points out accurately. Soon the group stumbles upon a few Vietcongs and before you can ask yourself ‘what will Rambo do in a situation like this?’ our heroes eliminate the enemies by decapitation, slashing their throats, crushing their skulls or simply gunning them down. All this is presented in a vicious, gruesome, but realistic and effective way and you know right away that CANNIBAL MERCENARY isn’t your ordinary jungle action flick.

Surprisingly, the acting is quite good and convincing. Special mention must go to the guy who plays Wilson, who gives us a credible and memorable performance of the broken anti-hero. But the other cast members are pretty good too, and one can almost feel their pain when they are confronted with the most horrific things imaginable. The camerawork is also very good, as it manages to give us the impression that we’re almost amidst the terrible goings-on (it’s really a shame that the camerawork can’t be fully appreciated as the only remaining uncensored version of this film is in horrible full screen). While the editing is not that good the music certainly is. Although some pieces are lifted from the Goblin soundtrack of the European version of DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978) I have to say that these pieces also work very well in this movie and perfectly underline and intensify certain key sequences. The story is interesting too, even though some parts have a lot in common with Francis Ford Coppola’s APOCALYPSE NOW (1979), mainly the Vietnam setting and the crazy Colonel. The idea to add some brain-eating cannibals to the already cruel proceedings eventually lifts the film into ultra-gore territory.

Truth be told, I have to say I came away with mixed impressions. On the one hand it portrays the horrors of war very well, and on the other hand it revels in unnecessary brutality and detailed gross-out gore moments. I think the ambition of the makers (if there ever was one) is somehow marred by this exploitative approach, though gorehounds certainly will be more than pleased by the on-screen violence. There are decapitations, slashed throats, knife wounds, bullet hits, crushed skulls, bisections, castrations, bullets in the heads, swords through bodies, and arrows that bore into flesh. But all this probably can’t prepare you for the gory sights in the finale, when one unfortunate man is buried up to his neck and his unprotected head is cracked open with hammer and chisel in loving detail. Blood gushes, the brains are exposed... and soon the hungry cannibals have the feast of the day. Before you have time to recover from this shock another prisoner has his eyes gouged out by the insane Colonel! No wonder the major part of these scenes are missing from the export print.

Even if the splatter effects look quite cheaply they are very realistic and pretty convincing and no worse than those seen in Italian cannibal gut-crunchers. CANNIBAL MERCENARY is an immensely gripping, brutal and shocking exploitation flick and when the 103 minutes running time are finally over all you can admit is that it does live up to its notoriety. The great ending is kind of schizophrenic by the way. One part of it is happy and optimistic, while the other part is very dark and nihilistic. This somehow reflects the whole movie that sometimes is a riveting anti-war film and sometimes a cheap and ultra-violent exploitation flick. The cover scan seen on the top is from the German DVD release, but before you surf happily to your next online shop let me tell you that this version is the export print of the movie, which infamous producer Tomas Tang cut together some time in the 1980s. While the full uncut CANNIBAL MERCENARY runs 102 min. 25 sec. the export version runs a mere 82 min. 38 sec. Both lots of story elements and most of the gorier moments are cut out, and - to add insult to injury - someone shot brand new scenes with three American idiots searching for a treasure that later were inserted into the movie. This doesn’t make much of a sense, but in this way the running time clocks in at over 80 minutes, since about 30 to 35 minutes (minimum!) are removed from the original version! So do yourself a favour and stay clear of the export version.

As stated above the uncut and uncensored CANNIBAL MERCENARY is the version to look out for. It was released in the 1980s in the USA on tape (with the on-screen title MERCENARY), but this version was out of print years ago so chances are pretty much nil that you are able to track it down. This version (as far as I know the only uncut release of this great film) is in a horrible full screen format and dubbed into English, and not very good at that. The German DVD states that it is based on the only remaining print of the movie but I refuse to believe this and continue hoping for an uncensored, widescreen DVD in the (hopefully) not-too-distant future.


DVD/Germany/letterbox/English + German dub/83 min.
[click scan for bigger size]

[not only is this German dvd heavily cut, it has also received the 'Thomas Thang treatment'! In other words; yes it's a cut 'n' paste version with inserts of Western actors to make it look more, well, Western!!]

UK/dvd-r/fullscreen/English dub/uncut 104 minute version.
This UK bootleg from ZDD contains the long uncut version from the US tape. The picture quality is good and as there are no official releases available at present time this is the only way to buy the uncut film.

One more review:
Fred Anderson's review on Ninja Dixon blog! Direct link here.


A BIG thank you goes out to Kiba from Cinehound forum for providing me with a copy of the Thai version! Thanks mate!!

And thanks also to Günter Müller for getting that review for me!
Also thanks to Andrew for his review. And lastly but certainly not least big thanks to Kiba of Cinehound forum who provided the full scan of the Thai VCD cover!

12 comments:

  1. Is this version uncut? I've been trying to find this for a time now, but no luck.

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  2. Fred, this is the fully uncut version running 103 minutes. It's taken from the US vhs which is so rare it's practically vanished from the face of the Earth!

    There is a German dvd under the alternative title of "Jungle Killers" but it's heavily cut and clocks in after only 83 min.

    You can get this bootleg from ZDD in the UK. I highly recommend them as they've got good prints, very nice printed cover art (no smudgy ink prints), are fairly cheap, and ship out very quickly.

    Check out the dvd here:
    http://zddvisualmedia.com/index.php?a=121&id=11798

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for the link! Good price to! When I'm there, is there any other releases from this place you recommend?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well, I live in the land of trashy Asia so that's what I know about and can recommend. But I'm sure there's other stuff that might interest you. Apparently they have quite a few subtitled giallo movies that don't exist with English dub or subs anywhere else.

    I'll recommend these three title and they are ALL no-holds-barred entertainment!!!

    1: LETHAL HUNTER (aka American Hunter), directed by Arizal and starring Chris Mitchum (and in a small role Peter 'Rambu' O'Brian).

    2: FINAL SCORE, the other highly entertaining Arizal & Chris Mitchum film from Indonesia.

    3: LETHAL HUNT, an over-the-top lone wolf cop vs. crooked cops film from the Philippines.

    4: PHANTOM SOLDIERS, über-entertaining trashy war movie which partly plays off like a horror movie. From Teddy Page, the director of BLOOD DEBTS!

    5: SPECIAL SILENCERS, more insane action from Arizal. With Barry Prima.

    Okay, so I can't count, that's five not three but they're all amazing. Maybe I should have made a site for amazing Asian trash flicks instead, LOL.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Okey, I've tried to order Cannibal Mercenary to start with... just wanna check their service and quality :)

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  6. I just bought the PVC release for $0.85 (yes less than a buck!). I didn't know it existed until I saw it here. Had a boot of it from Black Hearts Media.

    -Atherton

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  7. Less than a dollar! Yeah, just rub it in will ya!! LOL.

    I paid many times a dollar. Bucket loads of dollars. A whole truck load of dollars!

    I got it from a Cinehound forum member in Finland but before that I had searched high and low and never found it. I've asked on several big film message boards. I've asked collectors. I've advertised. Nothing. Zilch.

    I spoke to a guy in OZ who had been looking for 10 years and only found it once but the seller didn't wanna sell it to him. My luck was that I went back to the seller which the guy in OZ had told me about and I asked him about it. Needless to say I was shocked with surprise to learn that he still had the tape (this was years after the other guy had asked him). The thing is he had promised to sell the tape to a friend but the friend was always skint so he couldn't buy it. However, the seller didn't wanna break his promise to his friend and thus couldn't sell it to someone else. So I got in contact with the seller's broke friend and tried to bribe him and after a while he gave in and let me buy the tape off his friend. Ahh, the things collectors go thru to get their "stuff", LOL.

    So, trust me, it's not a tape you come by every day that's for sure. Again, you're a lucky guy!! :D

    One dollar, wauw. Please don't ever mention that to me again. Haha.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I do feel lucky and fortunate for what I have been able to find over the years Jack. But when I see the tapes you're pullin without a doubt you're way more hardcore than I am. You and the other brothers at Cinehound help keep the hunt for tapes going.

    -Atherton

    ReplyDelete
  9. Thanks Atherton. :D
    Btw, I see your link goes to Nostalgia Family; I remember someone at Dvdmaniacs mentioning that place as well, either they worked there or even owned it. It that you? Well, in any case thanks for commenting and checking out my wee site. :o)

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  10. Yeah that's me Jack. I'm also Robert F. at avmaniacs (Atherton on Cinehound/Kungfucinema) either way on the internet I'm all mixed up. I only work at Nostalgia Family Video. You're welcome Jack, your blogs are quite informative.

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  11. Hi Jack

    Just in case anyone needed to know, zddvisualmedia.com have now closed - darn it!!


    Karlos

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  12. Tell me about it! I cried for days!!

    ReplyDelete

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