Page 32 of 39

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 11 Nov 2017, 03:31
by Moltisanti
Your notes were great! Such a cool blu release.

Had a fun time on this podcast again. Definitely look forward to doing it again down the road.

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 12 Nov 2017, 19:31
by Jox
Thanks! I was proud to be part of this special edition to help making the Dolph interview happen.
The only frustration was that I could write the text any longer.
I found out a lot more on the genesis and pre-production of the project since then by the way...


Jox wrote:Nameless Media partnered with Splendid Films to release new Mediabook and hard cover editions of RED SCORPION (no extras, and probably still very expensive)
https://www.facebook.com/NameLessMediaF ... =3&theater

Image

See the inside booklet and reproduction of lobby cards that come along with it:

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 02 Dec 2017, 14:32
by Jox
New interview with Joseph Zito in the French mook magazine "Ciné-Bazar" #6

EDIT:
Image

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 20 Jan 2018, 17:38
by Jox
30 years ago, RED SCORPION was still filming after close to 5 months of production in Namibia, wrapping principal photography sometime in February 1988...

Image

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 26 Jan 2018, 02:32
by Jox
BTS pic from Namibian actor Neo M. Matsunyane
Image

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 01 Feb 2018, 09:43
by Jox
BetterBellSaul @BetterBellSaul
a couple of #35mm stills my dad took on the set of the 1988 film Red Scorpion with @Dolph_Lundgren found in the bottom of one of his treasure troves!

Image

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 11 Feb 2018, 03:45
by Cinephilx
Hi,

This expensive NSM bluray edition is the best on the market for Red Scorpion ?
Saw it very young and wanna discover it again with the best conditions :)
Kind Regards.

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 12 Feb 2018, 12:06
by Jox
The best editions are the Synapse Films (US) and Arrow (UK) editions (both region free).
Note that the Synapse one bears more supplements (+ liner notes by yours truly) and a nicely mixed 5.1 sound track (addition to the original 2.0).

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 27 Feb 2018, 09:42
by Jox
48 Hours of Movies: 1989!
http://www.fthismovie.net/2018/02/48-ho ... -1989.html
3:45 pm - Red Scorpion (dir. Joseph Zito)

Image

Way more competently made but not a great deal more intelligent is Red Scorpion, one of the first starring vehicles for Dolph Lundgren. He plays a Russian soldier fighting in Africa who is left for dead, goes on (in the words of Adam Thas) a vision quest, and joins forces with the African bushmen to fight back against the Russian army. Director Joe Zito knows his way around and action movie and the makeup/gore effects are done by Tom Savini, but it's the movie's politics and unusual setting (unusual setting for an action movie, that is) that set it apart from the countless action films made during the peak of #HeavyAction.

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 19 Mar 2018, 20:38
by Jox
HK or Taiwan Laserdisc

Image



German Mediabook from Nameless Media (booklet and mini lobby cards but no special features)

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 20 Apr 2018, 17:03
by Jox
On a sunny day of the summer '88, about 8 months after my shock theatrical experience of MASTERS, I stumbled upon this awesome cover and my first look at RED SCORPION, which wrapped its tumultuous filming 30 years ago in late February... :oops: 8)

Image

Ciné-News magazine made my education on all things Dolph and all, and what I have been doing for the past 15+ years is the continuation of it.

It was the best source on our favorite action stars back then, with a lot of exclusive news, coverage and interviews, as well as 8 posters included or sometimes specials like this one that only featured posters. It ran from September/October of 1985 to January of 1994, pretty much the golden era of action... The French Impact (that was 6 years before the British one - and they were not affiliated) was another very good one, though a little less focused on Sly and co because it ran broader content.

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 23 Apr 2018, 21:54
by Jox
Spanish press flyer

Image

Image

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 26 Jun 2018, 19:50
by Jox
Just read that comment on FB Cannon Appreciation Society:
Red Scorpion shared the same Director, Cinematographer, and Music Composer as “Missing In Action”. This film was essentially a Cannon film in all but name. The character played by Dolph Lungren was basically a Russian Colonel Braddock.

"Basically a Russian Colonel Braddock" is such a narrow, reductive way of apprehending the character and the film... In fact, they don't share much in common in my humble opinion.

I find too many fans and writers on film sites nowadays just like to put everything in the same basket with no care for detail, nuance or distinction and careful analysis (which can make a HUGE difference in what the film is about and how to criticise or appreciate it)...

Or is it me who spent too much time reading film magazines, books, graduating in film studies etc?

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 26 Jun 2018, 20:16
by lt.brannigan
There is no comparison, Dolph's character is in no way a Russian Braddock. Those two characters have completely different arcs... they might as well say he's a Russian Rambo or whatever.

Except for genre there is nothing that these movies share in common.

Russian Braddock? Seriously? That's malarkey and some of the most uninformed BS I have read lately.

Re: RED SCORPION (Joseph Zito, 1988)

PostPosted: 22 Jul 2018, 09:58
by bomaz
A strong influencer made a tweet about Red Scorpio and its political context.