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DVD : The Evil That Men Do

 : The Evil That Men Do
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The Evil That Men Do
starring: Charles Bronson, Theresa Saldana, Joseph Maher, José Ferrer, René Enríquez
directed by: J. Lee Thompson

List Price: $19.94
Price: $15.95
You Save: $3.99 (20%)
Prices subject to change.




Amazon.com Details:
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780767869799
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0767869796
Label: Sony Pictures
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Sony Pictures
Region Code: 99
Release Date: March 19, 2002
Running Time: 90 minutes
Studio: Sony Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: September 14, 1984
Sales Rank: 20700




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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Just Like I Remembered
This movie was just as I remembered, the movie had great quality and the wide version made the movie seem like a new one and the storyline was just right for Charles Bronson



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Uncut Version?
Every version of the movie (DVD or VHS) I've seen in the past 20 years contains the _cut_ version. It only shows the torture of the male prisoner, and the doctor's opening scene starts with the bloody corpse of the female. The original version started with a monologue to the audience about the differences in terror/torture of male vs female prisoners, and showed the torture of the female prisoner (which is how she ended up on the gurney).

Without this opening, the comments about the movie failing to explore the horrors of the theme are pretty on-target. Without this opening, most of the movie makes no sense. It was the opening that set the stage, and ingrained itself in my memory for the past 20 years.

Does the truly UNCUT version exist anywhere? I can only think it wasn't politically correct to show the torture/murder of the female prisoner, and it was cut, and never put back in any version. But, it was this cold, horrible, contrasts in torture that made this movie memorable, and took it out of the realm of just a gore-fest into something that gave insight into the atrocities still going on in the world.








Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - even for a bronson movie,this is just sick
this story of a killer who comes out of retirement to take out a south american tourcher expert is by far the sickest bronson action movie ever made. should come with an airsick bag!!!!



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The Incredible Bronson Torture Show
The science of torture will never be the same when Bronson gets wicked pissed and goes to south america to even the score.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Absolutely Brutal Bronson Actioner
Charles Bronson passed away recently, and to remember him I decided to view once again one of his most bizarre films, "The Evil That Men Do." Returning to this film at least ten years after I last watched it was quite the trip down memory lane, back to the invigorating 1980s when low budget films like this played on cable every night. Some of the best B-movie action flicks in that era starred Bronson, who worked closely with companies like Cannon in order to bring us numerous sequels in his "Death Wish" franchise, the gruesome "10 to Midnight," and the immensely unentertaining "Assassination." Of course, Bronson was much more than a string of cheesy actioners in the 1980s; he also appeared in some of the best known films of all time, like "The Dirty Dozen," "Once Upon a Time in the West," and "Chino." Bronson's death at the age of eighty-one means we will never see a new Charles Bronson film, but at least we have plenty of great films to remember him by. I will miss him.

"The Evil That Men Do" may not be one of Bronson's best roles, but it certainly ranks as one of his seediest. In this sleazy production, Bronson plays a retired assassin named Holland living out his days on the Cayman Islands. Life looks good until an old friend arrives on the island looking to lure Holland back into business again. This friend, Hector Lomelin (played by Jose Ferrer) brings with him a mountain of videotaped testimony in which an endless string of people relate personal accounts of the most repulsive tortures inflicted upon them and their families. One name repeatedly appears in these accounts: The Doctor, specifically Dr. Clement Molloch, a demented physician who dedicates his life to instructing petty despots in desolate Central American countries about the intricacies of mental and physical torture. In fact, the movie begins with a lengthy scene of the doctor's work, as he teaches a group of military officials in Surinam how to put out the lights on those pesky political opponents who always complain about such irritating things as elections, civil rights, and due process of law. Holland eventually agrees to exterminate the doctor in the name of human decency; he even refuses to accept a fee for hunting down this aberrant creature.

Holland heads to Central America to track down Molloch, but in order to allay any suspicions from the doctor and his gang of bodyguards, he brings along Rhiana Hildalgo (Theresa Saldana) and her daughter to pose as his wife and child. Hildalgo's husband died at the hands of Clement Molloch, so she ostensibly wants to see his memory avenged. Holland and his "family" meet up with Max Ortiz, a guy who hates despotic regimes and their reliance on Molloch as a political weapon. With Ortiz supplying the information on the doctor's whereabouts, Holland starts knocking off the hired help. He kills one of the bodyguards by flinging a knife into his throat, hangs another one with a fire hose, shotguns a couple of baddies, and kidnaps Molloch's seamy sister in order to lure the doctor into the line of fire. Along the way, Holland runs into problems with Paul Briggs, a U.S. embassy official who kowtows to Molloch and his goons. In a film loaded with atrocity piled on atrocity, ... Read More