Gordon's War (1973)
8/10
It's time to clean up the neighborhood
26 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Take-charge Green Beret Gordon Hudson (a bang-up performance by the always reliable Paul Winfield) returns to Harlem after serving a four year tour of duty in Vietnam. Gordon discovers that the neighborhood has been overrun with drugs, prostitution, and other kinds of organized crime. Gordon rounds up three 'Nam vet buddies so they can wipe out the no-count hoodlums who have corrupted the city. Director Ossie Davis, working from a tight and hard-hitting script by Ed Spielman and Howard Friedlander, relates the gripping story at a snappy pace, ably creates and maintains an appropriately harsh and gritty tone, and stages the exciting action-packed climax with real skill and flair. Winfield's strong and commanding presence effortlessly carries the picture; he receives sturdy support from Carl Lee as the amiable Bee Bishop, Tony King as the easygoing Roy Green, and David Downing as the hip Otis Russell. Moreover, there's a neat array of hateful villains: Gilbert Lewis as ruthless kingpin Spanish Henry, Carl Gordon as the slimy and sniveling Luther the Pimp, and Nathan C. Heard as vicious dope pusher Big Pink. Popping up in nifty bits are singer Grace Jones as drug currier Mary and an uncredited Charles McGregor (Fat Freddie in "Superfly") as dope peddler Jim. The outbursts of brutal violence pack a ferocious punch while the grungy Harlem locations add a certain raw authenticity. Victor J. Kemper's slick cinematography makes cool occasional use of split screen and freeze frames. The funky score by Al Elias and Angela Badalamenti hits the get-down groovy-thrilling spot. An excellent urban action winner.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed