A former Special Operations Vietnam vet works as a Chicago cop, and uncovers C.I.A. wrongdoing.A former Special Operations Vietnam vet works as a Chicago cop, and uncovers C.I.A. wrongdoing.A former Special Operations Vietnam vet works as a Chicago cop, and uncovers C.I.A. wrongdoing.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
- Father Gennaro
- (as Joe V. Greco)
- Agent Halloran
- (as Gregory Alan-Williams)
- Lt. Strozah
- (as Joseph Kosala)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaHenry Silva broke Steven Seagal's nose in the final fight scene. Seagal was rushed to the hospital. The next day Seagal was back at work. He stayed up all night icing it, so that he wouldn't get a black eye.
- GoofsDuring the search in Nico's house, an officer calls Steven Seagal "Steve" instead of "Nico."
- Quotes
Nico Toscani: You know something Fox. Right now in Europe they're trying some 80 year-old camp guard for Nazi war crimes. And all around our country they got guys on death row for murdering 1, 2, 3 guys. And they probably deserve what they're going to get. But you & I... we know a couple of people that are personally responsible for the death of what, 50,000 non-military personnel? Librarians, teachers, doctors, women, children. All dead! We've wiped-out entire cultures! And for what? Not one C.I.A. agent has ever been tried, much less accused of any crimes. You guys think you're above the law. Well, you ain't above mine.
- Alternate versionsGerman uncut DVD came out in 2006 with all violent scenes intact.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Siskel & Ebert: Colors/18 Again!/Above the Law/Bad Dreams (1988)
The plot, despite being from 1988, still comes across as contemporary and relevant. Nico quits the CIA in the 'Nam after witnessing a crooked superior taking advantage of the war to become a drug baron. Many years later he encounters that same villain who is abusing his status of being 'above the law' to seize more drug territory and pump more drug money into the CIA. War is always profitable.
It would be an intriguing plot for a 135-minute movie. But Above the Law tries to cram it all into 99 minutes and in the style of early 80s Charles Bronson. Don't get me wrong, Andrew Davis has always had muscular direction and takes the material seriously, but the heavy story and ambitious commentary are mostly squandered for the sake of making sure the credits roll after an hour and a half. The ending seems rushed, leaving just a little to much confusion and too many dots unconnected.
Still, it's interesting to see Seagal young, thin, and talking clearly.
- CuriosityKilledShawn
- May 28, 2012
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $7,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $18,869,631
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,037,938
- Apr 10, 1988
- Gross worldwide
- $18,869,631
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1