Review: Hellfire (dir. by Isaac Florentine)


“What you started here today? About to get a whole lot worse.” — Nomada

Hellfire is the kind of mid-budget, throwback action-thriller that knows exactly which bar it’s aiming for—and then mostly clears it with room to spare. Set in 1988 and built around a classic “mysterious drifter wanders into a rotten town” premise, it leans hard into familiar tropes but finds some personality in its cast, pacing, and sense of place. It’s not a game-changer for the genre, but if you’re in the mood for a lean, old-school small-town showdown, it gets the job done more often than not.

The setup is comfort food for action fans. A nameless drifter, played by Stephen Lang, rolls into the dying Southern town of Rondo, where the locals are quietly suffocating under the control of drug boss Jeremiah Whitfield, a politician-connected crime lord who pretty much owns the place. The bar owner Owen gives the drifter some work and a meal, the sheriff shows up to strongly suggest he move along, and you can basically feel the town holding its breath, waiting for somebody—anybody—to push back. That somebody, obviously, is this guy, who’s soon nicknamed Nomada and revealed to be an ex–Green Beret with a messy past and a higher capacity for violence than his weathered demeanor suggests. The story is straightforward to the point of being telegraphed, but that simplicity is part of its appeal; you always know what lane Hellfire is driving in.

Performance-wise, the movie’s biggest asset is Lang. At this point, watching him settle into the “old guy you really shouldn’t mess with” archetype is half the fun, and Hellfire plays that card well. He doesn’t oversell the trauma angle, but the film gives him just enough flashbacks and quiet beats—like those bath-time war memories—to suggest a guy who’s been stuck in fight mode for decades and doesn’t know what to do with peace. His physicality is still convincing, and director Isaac Florentine is smart about staging the action around what Lang does well, letting him move with purpose instead of pretending he’s 30 years younger. He’s not reinventing the “wandering warrior” type, but he grounds Nomada enough that you buy people trusting him even when they’re terrified. There’s a warmth under the stubble and scars that gives the character a little more dimension than the script strictly requires.

The supporting cast is a mixed bag, but the core players are solid. Harvey Keitel’s Jeremiah Whitfield is exactly the kind of villain you expect in this setup: soft-spoken, smug, and insulated by money and enforcers. He doesn’t get a ton of screen time, but there’s something appropriately gross about how casual he is with other people’s lives, like he’s already factored their suffering into his monthly budget. Dolph Lundgren shows up as the corrupt sheriff Wiley, playing the heavy who’s technically the law but functionally just another thug with a badge. Lundgren brings some weary menace to the role, and there’s a nice little tension in how much he’s genuinely bought into Jeremiah’s world versus how much he’s just too compromised to get out. Scottie Thompson’s Lena, Owen’s daughter, is the emotional anchor; she’s the one with something real to lose, and while the film doesn’t push her arc especially far, she’s likable enough that you care when things go sideways.

On the weaker end, Michael Sirow turns in a caricature performance as Spencer, the entitled and whiny son of Jeremiah, all sneers and petulance that feels like it stepped straight out of a ’80s cartoon villain playbook without any nuance to back it up. Similarly, Johnny Yong Bosch as enforcer Zeke sleepwalks through every scene that isn’t action, delivering a by-the-numbers performance for a character supposed to be the crime boss’ dangerous right-hand man; even in the fights, it’s rote and uninspired, missing the edge that could’ve made Zeke a real threat.

On the character side, Hellfire actually does a bit more groundwork than you might expect from what is essentially a B-movie revenge Western in modern dress. The early stretch spends time letting you feel the town’s exhaustion and fear—bars that are half-empty, people looking over their shoulders, everyone resigned to Jeremiah’s stranglehold. That world-building pays off once the violence kicks in, because it’s clear what’s at stake beyond simple body count or spectacle. The film also tries to deepen Nomada’s backstory, hinting at survivor’s guilt and a lingering sense that he’s been wandering from one moral debt to another, but it never quite connects those dots in a satisfying way. By the time the movie starts circling around for a full-circle emotional payoff, you can see what it’s going for, yet the groundwork feels a little thin, like pages were cut or ideas left half-developed.

Pacing-wise, Hellfire is tighter than its 95-ish-minute runtime might imply, and that’s mostly a compliment. The first half is surprisingly light on action, preferring to simmer instead of boil; you get a few scuffles and tense stand-offs, but Florentine holds back on the big fireworks. When things finally explode—hostages, ambushes, warehouses, the works—the film shifts into a mode that feels like controlled chaos, mixing gunfights, hand-to-hand scraps, and vehicle beats with a clarity that’s increasingly rare in this budget range. The trade-off is that the final act feels a bit rushed, like the movie suddenly remembered it had to tie off multiple arcs and body the main villains within a fairly strict time limit. The last stretch does what you expect it to do, including Jeremiah’s fiery fate, but it doesn’t linger long enough to fully earn the emotional weight it’s shooting for.

The action itself sits in that “serviceable to occasionally inspired” space. Florentine, coming from a background in stunt-heavy genre work, keeps things clean and legible; you always know who’s shooting at whom and from where. The shootouts can get cheesy—there’s a bit of that “nobody can hit anyone until the plot needs it” energy—but there are also flashes where staging and geography line up to deliver genuinely satisfying beats. A warehouse sequence where Nomada protects Lena while taking out multiple attackers is a standout, capturing both his tactical skill and the desperation of the situation. The film clearly favors quality over volume; genre die-hards who want wall-to-wall mayhem might wish for more set pieces, but the ones you get mostly land. If anything, some of the tonal shifts—bouncing from grim brutality to borderline goofy machismo—don’t always mesh perfectly, though that’s also kind of baked into the retro B-movie DNA.

Visually, Hellfire doesn’t reinvent the wheel, but it looks better than a lot of its DTV-adjacent peers. Shot in Arkansas and set in the late ’80s, it leans into dusty small-town Americana: sun-faded storefronts, weathered bars, lonely roads. Ross W. Clarkson’s cinematography keeps things grounded, with an emphasis on practical locations and natural light that makes the town feel like an actual lived-in place rather than a backlot abstraction. The period setting isn’t showy—you’re not constantly being smacked with nostalgia props—but it subtly shapes the world, especially in how isolated and cut-off Rondo feels without modern communication and surveillance everywhere. The score by Stephen Edwards does what it needs to do, nudging tension along without ever becoming a character in its own right.

Where the film stumbles is mostly in how predictable and occasionally clumsy it can be. You can see many of the beats coming from miles away: the town’s breaking point, the betrayals, who will die to motivate whom. There is one darker turn that genuinely catches you off guard, and it helps shake the movie out of its comfort zone for a bit, but the script overall is content to color inside the genre lines. Some dialogue leans on cliché, and a few supporting characters feel like they wandered in from a rougher first draft—the kind of broad sketches you’ve seen a dozen times before. It’s never bad enough to sink things, but it does cap how high Hellfire can climb; this is a movie that’s satisfied with solid rather than special.

Still, taken on its own terms, Hellfire works. It gives Stephen Lang a solid platform to do what he does best, surrounds him with a fun mix of seasoned character actors, and delivers enough muscular, clearly shot action to justify the ticket or rental. The town feels real enough that you actually care whether Nomada cleans it up, and the film respects the basics: clear stakes, likable underdogs, villains you’re happy to see go down in flames. If you go in expecting a tight, modest, R-rated throwback with a few rough edges and a couple of standout moments rather than a new genre benchmark, you’ll probably come away satisfied. It’s generic, sure—but it’s the kind of generic that remembers to give you characters to root for, action you can actually see, and just enough personality to make the ride worth taking.

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Raoul Walsh Edition


4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!

129 years ago today, film director Raoul Walsh was born in New York City.  He started out as an actor and a second unit director, learning how to make films under the tutelage of D.W. Griffith.  He made his directorial debut in 1915 with Regeneration, which is considered to be the first gangster film.  Refusing to sidelined after losing an eye in an auto accident, Walsh continued to direct and his career stretched from the silent era all the way to the mid-60s.  Walsh directed westerns, war films, and gangster films.  He was a master of tough but sometimes quirky action films.  Martin Scorsese continues to cite Walsh as being an influence on his own work.

Today. we pay tribute to Raoul Walsh with….

4 Shots From 4 Raoul Walsh Films

The Roaring Twenties (1939, dir by Raoul Walsh, DP: Ernest Haller)

They Drive By Night (1940, dir by Raoul Walsh, DP: Arthur Edeson)

Gentleman Jim (1942, dir by Raoul Walsh, DP: Sidney Hickox)

White Heat (1949, dir by Raoul Walsh, DP: Sidney Hickox)

Music Video of the Day: Barstow by Jena Malone (2026, dir by Jennifer Reeder)


If you were wondering what Jena Malone has been up to, she’s got a solo album coming out.  It’s called Flowers For Men and it will be released on May 8th.  Here’s the music video for her first single, Barstow.

Enjoy!

Brad’s Scene of the Day – The Bar Fight in CODE OF SILENCE!


As a teenager of the late 1980’s, I’ve always been a huge fan of Chuck Norris. And my favorite Chuck Norris movie has always been CODE OF SILENCE. My wife and I are celebrating the action star’s 86 birthday by watching the classic from director Andrew Davis! Norris was never better than he is here!

I Watched Who Killed The Montreal Expos? (2025, Dir. by Jean-François Poisson)


Who Killed The Montreal Expos? is a documentary about the first major league baseball franchise to be located outside of the United States.  From 1969 to 2004, the Expos played in Montreal, Canada.  The documentary shows how the Expos became a source of pride for the people of Montreal and how it also became a source of one of their greatest heartbreaks when, after years of financial mismanagement, it relocated and became the Washington Nationals.

I guess one reason why I could relate to this documentary was because, before they got the Nationals, Washington had two baseball teams known as the Senators.  The first Senators moved to Milwaukee in 1961 and became the Twins.  The second team to be known as the Senators relocated in 1971 and became my team, the Texas Rangers.  Sometimes, it’s hard for me to believe that my beloved Rangers once had a different name and played for a different city.  I can’t imagine how much it would hurt if the Rangers ever announced that they were leaving Texas.  But, as the Expos showed in 2004 and as the Chicago Bears are showing right now, even the most storied of franchises can relocate.

Who Killed The Montreal Expos? offers a lot of theories of what led to Montreal’s team leaving from Washington D.C.  A players strike in 1994 ended a season that could have taken the Expos to the World Series.  In 1995, several bad trades led to the Expos going from being the best team in the league to the worst.  The team was in need of a new stadium but could never seem to raise the funds to build one.  The documentary puts most of the blame on the second-to-last owner, an American who a lot of people think was planning to move the team all along.  In the end, it doesn’t seem like there was just one reason for the Expos leaving Montreal.  It was a perfect storm of hardships and mistakes and, unfortunately, it was the baseball fans of Montreal who suffered.

I don’t know who’s to blame.  I just know it hurts when your team leaves.  Montreal, I hope your Expos return soon!  And I pray my Rangers never leave Texas.

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Chuck Norris Edition


4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!

Today, we celebrate the birthday of Chuck Norris.  It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 Chuck Norris Films

Silent Rage (1982, dir by Michael Miller, DP: Robert Jessup and Neil Roach)

Missing In Action (1984, dir by Joseph Zito, DP: João Fernandes)

The Delta Force (1986, dir by Menahem Golan, DP: David Gurifinkel)

Invasion USA (1985, dir by Joseph Zito, DP: João Fernandes)

Scenes That I Love: Chuck Norris Saves America In Invasion U.S.A.


Today, Chuck Norris celebrates his 86th birthday and it only feels appropriate that today’s scene that I love should come from one of his greatest films.  From 1985’s Invasion U.S.A., watch as Chuck Norris saves America from Richard Lynch!

One Piece: Into the Grand Line (Season 2, Episode 1 “The Beginning and the End”) Review


“Don’t hold a father’s sins against his son. Blood doesn’t dictate destiny—everyone chooses their own path on this sea.” — Gol D. Roger

The Season 2 premiere of One Piece feels like a confident “we know what worked, and we’re doubling down” while also quietly admitting there’s still a long Grand Line of growing pains ahead. The episode is busy, sometimes overstuffed, but it’s rarely dull, and it mostly recaptures the scrappy charm that made Season 1 such an unexpected win for anime-to-live-action adaptations.

Season 2 picks up with the Straw Hats heading toward the Grand Line, and the show wastes no time reminding you how much the core ensemble carries this adaptation. Iñaki Godoy’s Luffy still feels like the glue: goofy, earnest, and occasionally dangerous in that “you can’t believe this idiot is a future legend” way that matches the spirit of the source without copying the anime’s louder extremes. Emily Rudd’s Nami and Mackenyu’s Zoro remain the show’s emotional and stoic anchors, respectively, and the premiere leans on their established dynamics rather than reinventing them. You feel like you’re hanging out with a crew that’s already lived together for a while, which is half the battle in making this world feel real.

The premiere’s biggest shift is structural. Season 2 is tasked with bridging Loguetown, Reverse Mountain, and the early Alabasta material, and you can feel the writers trying to thread a needle between faithfulness and streamlining. Instead of lingering on the smaller beats of each arc, the episode compresses them into a fast-moving chain of set pieces and character introductions. Loguetown becomes less a full-fledged arc and more a dense prologue to the Grand Line era, packed with Marines, pirate legends, and hints of the Revolutionaries. Depending on what you want from this adaptation, that’s either exciting or mildly frustrating.

On the positive side, the sense of scale is undeniably bigger. The Marines’ presence, especially with Smoker and Tashigi entering the mix, gives the premiere a sharper cat-and-mouse energy. Smoker arrives as a force of nature—less cartoonishly overpowered than in the manga, but still clearly the kind of threat that turns Luffy’s carefree adventuring into something riskier. The show smartly plays him as a guy who thinks he’s in a different, more serious story, which makes his clashes with the Straw Hats fun to watch. Tashigi, meanwhile, brings a softer, more idealistic edge that contrasts nicely with Zoro’s exhaustion with swordsmen who talk too much.

The premiere also continues the series’ habit of sliding in big-name players earlier than the manga did, and that’s where the episode gets more divisive. Nico Robin and Dragon show up as ominous presences in the larger world, giving you a clearer sense of the many factions circling this goofy rubber pirate. The upside is that it makes the One Piece universe feel interconnected sooner; casual viewers get a better roadmap of who matters long-term. The downside is that some of these appearances flirt with Marvel-style “universe building” more than organic storytelling. When every scene is either paying off an old setup or seeding three new ones, it can be tough to just sit in a moment and feel it.

Production-wise, Season 2’s extra time and budget show. The premiere gives Loguetown and the surrounding seas a lived-in, often cinematic atmosphere that outpaces Season 1’s more patchwork locations. Costumes continue to walk that tightrope between cosplay-accurate and functional; Smoker, in particular, looks like he walked straight out of a stylized military drama with just enough anime flair layered on top. The CGI still isn’t blockbuster-tier, but the show compensates with smart framing and selective use—powers and creatures are used to accent action, not dominate it, which keeps things from tipping into uncanny territory.

Action remains one of the adaptation’s better tools, even if it still doesn’t fully hit the insanity of Oda’s panels. The premiere emphasizes clarity over spectacle: you can actually follow where people are standing, how the fight geography works, and what the emotional stakes are. That’s a big improvement over a lot of modern genre TV. When Smoker crashes into the story or the Straw Hats get caught up in the chaos of Loguetown, the choreography sells impact even when the VFX can’t quite keep up with the wilder Devil Fruit abilities. You won’t mistake it for Hong Kong–tier action cinema, but it’s clean, readable, and character-driven, which matters more for this kind of swashbuckling adventure.

Where the episode stumbles most is pacing and tone. The premiere is under pressure to reintroduce the main cast, onboard new viewers, set up Loguetown, tease Reverse Mountain, and seed the Alabasta saga, all while dropping in cameos and lore nods for fans who know exactly where this is all heading. That leads to a few whiplash moments where the show jumps from lighthearted crew banter to life-or-death tension to ominous worldbuilding monologues in rapid succession. Season 1 sometimes had that problem too, but the stakes are higher now, and you can feel the strain.

Character-wise, the core Straw Hats come out of the premiere in good shape, but some of the supporting cast is still fighting for oxygen. Garp appears in a flashback, speaking to Gol D. Roger before he is sent to the gallows—a visit that teases the arrival of a future fan-favorite set for season 3. While it’s good to see that thread remain important, these cutaways occasionally feel like they belong to a spin-off series. That worked in Season 1 as a way to broaden the world; here, with even more plates spinning and new villains entering, it risks crowding an already packed episode. At the same time, those scenes help underline one of the show’s better instincts: it keeps asking what piracy and justice actually mean in a world this chaotic, rather than just treating the Marines as cartoon bad guys.

Thematically, the premiere starts nudging One Piece toward slightly heavier waters without losing its goofy heart. The looming Grand Line, the introduced Revolutionaries, and the presence of more morally gray Marines all hint at a story that will increasingly interrogate systems of power and inherited ideals. But the episode never forgets that this is, first and foremost, a story about a weird found family chasing impossible dreams. The crew’s conversations on the Going Merry, the small jokes, and the quiet beats where they process what lies ahead are what keep the whole thing grounded.

As a Season 2 premiere, this episode does its job: it reassures fans that the live-action experiment wasn’t a fluke, raises the narrative ceiling, and points the ship squarely at the Grand Line with confidence. It’s not flawless—worldbuilding occasionally overtakes character focus, the pacing can feel like a sprint, and not every early cameo lands as organically as it should. But if you liked Season 1’s mix of earnestness, scrappy visual ambition, and slightly awkward but heartfelt adaptation choices, this opener suggests you’re in for a bigger, messier, and still surprisingly sincere voyage. For a story built on the idea that chasing the horizon is worth the risk, that feels like the right kind of start.