| Original
Title:
|
SHE
|
|
| Alternative title(s): | She - Eine Verruckte Reise in die
Zukunft - (She - A Moving Journey of the Future) - German VHS She - a Rainha da Guerra e do Amor - (She - The Rainha of Love and War) - Portuguese VHS Barbarian - Belgian VHS title |
|
| Year of Release: | 1982 UK, 1985
USA |
|
| Duration: | 106 Minutes |
|
| Country of Origin: | Italy/USA/Israel |
|
| Tagline(s): |
Sandra
Bergman tempted CONAN and now she is ready to take on the world" -
US VHS |
|
| Reviewed Version: | |
|
| Review: 5th December 07 |
I'm going to take a break
from movies for my next review, and instead
try and do 12 episodes of the lost first season of the classic NBC
sitcom Friends. I've always had a love/hate
relationship with this show, and I‘ve watched every episode
since it came on the air in 1994. I loved it because all the characters
were about my own age, and watching it was like daydreaming about how
my life should have been. I remember everyone in my dorm at college
gathering around the TV in the lounge every week to watch it. The hate
part of the relationship is because Jennifer Anniston's lawyers filed
that silly restraining order against me and the police said I
couldn‘t mail her pictures of my ass anymore. It's a little known fact,
but the series was first envisioned to be five close friends living in
a brutal post-apocalypse New York City, facing killer mutants,
radioactive toxic smog, and vicious slaver bandits while trying to stay
alive for one more day. This being 1982, and with Reagan seemingly
trying to poke the Russian Bear every chance he got, it was only
natural that pop culture television shows reflected the national
uneasiness about the future. Five relatively unknown actors were cast
and shooting began in late 1982, with the premiere slated for spring
1983. Sadly, horrified test audiences bagged it halfway through
production and the studio quickly replaced it in the lineup with reruns
of the insipid Joanie Loves Chachi. It wasn't until
1994 that the series was revived, this time with a totally different
cast and timeframe, and the rest is television history. Thanks to an "unnamed
source" within the archival department at NBC, I have been able to view
these 12 lost episodes of Friends, burned to a DVDR
from old grainy vhs tapes. They had been consigned to a dusty box in a
warehouse in Santa Barbara, but they are now comfortably locked away in
my office, awaiting the day when I sell them on eBay and make a fortune
and buy a beach house in Costa Rica and live the rest of my life eating
bananas and chasing underage native girls. Ok, so here are the 12
episodes, listed in order. The Friends quirky
trademark way of naming their episodes ("The one where...") started
here, so I've included their titles. I'm not going to go screen-cap
crazy like I normally do with my reviews, but I'll try and add in some
nice representative caps for each episode. Let's
get started. EPISODE
1.1: "The one where we meet Ross and Joey" Like the later
series, this
was set entirely in the New York City area, though one that looked a
whole lot different than the Manhattan of 1994. A nuclear war has
devastated the city and the world, reducing western civilization to a
barbaric wasteland populated by violent savages and desperate
survivors. In the pilot, we meet three
of our main characters; Ross, his sister Monica, and their friend Joey.
They are traveling merchants, wandering the wastelands of southern New
York, doing smalltime business deals and trying not to get stabbed or
eaten. Ross is played by total
unknown David Goss, who fell off the face of the planet soon after the
series was cancelled. Unlike David Schwimmer's wimpy milquetoast Ross
from 1994, this Ross is a hardened and resourceful survivor, quick with
a sword and good on his feet. He's also quite the lady's man, with
hunky looks and bouncy permed hair. His sister is Monica, played
by bit part actress Elena Wiedermann, who you might recognize as
“Second Virgin Warrior” from Thor the
Conqueror, but more than likely you’d know her as
the third shift cashier down at the Wal-Mart in Porterville. The other friend is Joey,
played by Harrison Muller, yet another low-rent hack, probably best
known as Jab in 2020: Texas Gladiators. Joey might
be the one character who retained much of his personality from 1982 to
1994. He's brash and bold, but pretty dim-witted and would be fairly
lost without Ross around to keep him out of trouble. He's also smooth
with the girls, though not as much as he thinks he is. Ok, the pilot episode opens
on a ferry boat crossing a river. Total guess, but I'm assuming this is
the Hudson and they are now on the upper end of Manhattan Island,
having crossed over from New Jersey. They head to a smallish outdoor
market where salvaged 1980s stuff is sold (corn flakes and Atari games
and the like). The three friends are here to sell homemade soaps and
shampoo and rubber gloves. Business is brisk, so they must be selling
cheap. Suddenly, the market is
attacked by a cavalry unit of Norks! The "Norks" live down in the
nuke-ravaged canyons of Manhattan's lower end, and they are feared by
all as killers and savages. They seem to be here just to take female
slaves, murdering anyone who stands in their way. The guys try not to get
involved with what is "not their problem", but eventually have to try
and fight their way out of there. The Norks are all dressed in wild
costumes and armed with a variety of weapons. The 1994 Friends
was always known for its trendy, up to date fashions, and for creating
numerous fashion trends of their own, and the 1982 Friends
seems to have started that. Well, trendy for a post-apocalyptic
wasteland, I guess. There are guys in silk
boxing robes, guys in Halloween skeleton costumes with scythes, guys in
football pads and tights with clubs, guys in top coats and tails with
knives, guys who look like Alex from A Clockwork Orange,
guys in pink pajamas and crossbows, every manner is silliness you can
imagine. You’d think that Ross and Joey could take these
clowns, but they prove to be adept fighters. In the end, Ross and Joey
are beat down and left for dead. Poor Monica takes harpoon in thigh (!)
and is drug off by the Norks to be their sex slave. EPISODE
1.2: "The one where we meet Rachel" In the second episode we
meet Rachel, who is the strong female lead of the series. Predating the
yummy Jennifer Anniston, the "old" Rachel was played by the
intimidatingly stunning 31-year old Sandahl Bergman, a six-foot blonde
with strong arms and retro flippy Farrah Fawcett hair. Despite her
Scandinavian-sounding name, she is actually from Kansas City, Kansas,
which is pretty cool. What's not cool, however, is that her career
tanked after this and she has since had little more than episodes of Murder,
She Wrote and Cheers to her credit. Rachel seems to be a cult
leader in this series, commanding a chunk of territory on the Upper
West Side, and a large castle of sorts, filled with ornate, baroque
paintings and lit with smoky candles. It looks like a former art
gallery or maybe a cultural center of some sort. This is a closed-loop
matriarchal society, with Rachel firmly in control and all men either
genuflexing vassals or abused slaves. A cadre of well-armed female
warriors is fiercely loyal to Rachel, and quick to kill anyone who
disagrees with her ways. All the girl soldiers are dressed like
hookers, however, which is fine by me. Oddly, her followers seem to
want to call her "SHE", but to keep you from getting confused, I'll
continue to call her "Rachel". The theme of worshiping of Rachel would
continue in the 1994 series, as millions of horny college students
(read: me) would routinely drop to their knees and pay homage to
Jennifer Anniston's awesomely sexy abs. Rachel's second in command,
and best friend, is Phoebe, who will also act as traveling companion
and bodyguard for the series. She was played by Quin Kessler, whose
acting resume highlight before getting this gig was the challenging
role of "hatcheck girl" in an episode of The Greatest
American Hero. She would go on to pump gas at Rajah's Chevron
station at Exit 22 on the 405. As this episode opens,
Rachel enters her throne room and eyes over a number of captured men
dressed only in loincloths and straining at ropes. She picks the
beefiest of them and then walks off. That chosen dude will get the
pleasure of sex with Rachel that night, but then the pain of a sword
through his heart instead of a warm, post-coital snuggle. Still,
Rachel's pretty damn hot, so I think I'd take my chances and die happy.
EPISODE
1.3: "The one where Ross and Joey meet Rachel" This episode begins with
Ross and Joey stumbling into a nearby village after being thumped and
left for dead by the Norks in the pilot. They meet a
seemingly-kindhearted woman who takes them in and feeds them soup. She
drugs their food, however, then chains them up. She keeps Joey as her
personal servant and sells Ross to Rachel and her followers, as men
folk are at a premium. Ross is taken to Rachel's
castle and tied up in a dark cell with some other luckless dudes.
Rachel and Phoebe come down to see the new slaves. This is the first
time Ross and Rachel have met in this series, and there is no hint of
the previous relationship issues that made the 1994 Ross and Rachel
such a dynamic character set. Here, Rachel just coldly orders him taken
outside. Ross is drug out into a
muddy flood plain by a group of armed women and forced to endure the
"Path of Blood". This consists of having to run an obstacle course of
razor sharp pointed sticks while the girls line up along the sides and
beat on him with sticks and whips! Oh, and he's blindfolded and has his
hands tied behind his back, which just doesn't seem fair. Despite that,
Ross manages to get through to the end with only a dozen or so bleeding
puncture wounds and collapses on the ground in agony. Phoebe wants to
kill him right there but Rachel says no, and they just walk off and
leave him to die. But Ross doesn't die here. A
lone guy comes out of the wilderness and carries him from the stake
place back to his alchemy lab. The guy tells Ross about the Norks,
Rachel, all that stuff that he needs to know to get the plot rolling.
He also tells Ross that only Rachel would know the way to the Nork
lands. EPISODE
1.4: "The one where Ross and Joey capture Rachel" Ross figures that the only
way to get his sister Monica back is to travel down to Lower Manhattan
and take her back from the Norks. The problem is that he doesn't know
the way. Since Rachel knows the way, Ross decides to kidnap Rachel and
make her show him the way into the city. Ross now goes back to save
Joey, who is still in chains, forced to peel onions and cohabitate with
smell goats. They exchange some lame banter (the quick, witty
back-and-forth that characterized the 1994 series never really takes
root here, another reason why this season never aired) before Ross
frees Joey from his bonds and they sneak off. They slip into Rachel's
castle now, dressed as monks with their faces covered by hoods. They
arrive in time to witness Rachel choosing another mate for the night. We now follow Rachel as she
goes off on some sort of quest. This is a confusing scene, but it seems
like she does down into the subway tunnels, which are stocked with
killer mutants and robots and the like. This sequence is one long,
bloody sword fight, with Rachel literally fighting for her life every
second of it. Attackers come at her one after the other, swinging
blades and clubs with malicious intent. This is yet another fashion
show, with each attacker dressed to kill (ha). There are ninja
swordsmen dressed like Arthurian knights, a robotic Frankenstein
monster, and roadies from a Adam Ant concert. Rachel is eventually
victorious, but cut in numerous places and bleeding badly in the end.
She stumbles through to a grotto of sorts and meets an old seer/sage.
Rachel strips down (!) and enters a pool to restore her health and
beauty. The exact chemical composition of this murky pool of leaking
toxic chemicals, radioactive seawater and industrial waste is never
said, but in short order Rachel's wounds are healed and her skin
regains that shimmery glow. The next night, Ross and
Joey sneak into Rachel's room and kidnap her at sword-point. Alerted by
the scuffle, Phoebe pursues, but is too late to prevent them from
exiting the castle with Rachel. EPISODE
1.5: "The one where they meet the mutants" The fifth episode opens with
Ross and Joey fleeing on foot with a bound and resisting Rachel. In hot
pursuit is Phoebe and some other girls on horses, mad as hornets. The guys stop along the way
to eat and talk, making sure to tie Rachel up to a post first as she's
definitely a flight-risk. Joey makes a move on Rachel but gets smacked
for his efforts. This Joey is not as smooth as Matt LeBlanc's Joey, and
not once says, "How yoooouuu doing?". Moving along, they soon
arrive at an abandoned factory of some sort and sleep for the night.
They are quite rudely awaken by diseased mutants with chainsaws! This
is a band of radiation-poisoned lepers who favor medical gauze bandages
for clothes, cod pieces, power tools, and bad sunglasses. Their leader knows Rachel
(they share a border apparently) and they banter a bit. It seems he's
been looking forward to this for a long time, and is going to enjoy
seeing Rachel die a horrible, painful death. Doesn’t anyone
get along in this world? So, the mutants force them
into a small room. A switch is thrown and the walls start to close in,
like the trash compactor in Star Wars! The three of
them strain and push, but the walls keep coming inexorably closer. The
mutants laugh diabolically and it doesn't look good. Just when it looks grim,
Phoebe and the girls arrive to save the day. They fight their way down
to the room, as Phoebe has an awesome battle with a chainsaw-wielding
mutant on the stairs. They then turn off the power just in time, after
some fumbling with unfamiliar electric switches and levers. In the episode's best bit,
the captured mutant leader warns an aggressive Phoebe, "Careful of my
arms, they tend to fall off!" One does as Phoebe pulls on it, and
the mutant just smiles and says, "I told you so." Priceless. EPISODE
1.6: "The one where they meet the vampires" While heading back to her
castle, Rachel has a change of heart and lets Ross and Joey go free.
She tells an incredulous Phoebe that she’s
“Curious.“ She and Phoebe then follow at a
distance. I think Rachel wants to see if these guys could really make
it all the way to the Nork lands. So Ross and Joey travel down
Manhattan Island, working their way through the overgrown wastelands of
the Upper West Side. They suddenly come across an anachronistic group
of nihilistic partygoers, living in what seems to be a large mansion.
These androgynous party girls and boys, dressed like Greeks with togas
and laurels, seem to want to do little more than drink and have sex
like college freshmen. The group's leader looks like a lavender gay Sid
Vicious, and he quickly invites Ross and Joey in for a drink. Not
having much willpower it seems, they agree and join the party. That night Ross and Joey are
treated to fancy dinner in borrowed coats and tails. Everyone is
dressed like it's 1929 and there is much dancing and carousing to the
tunes of an old record player. Surrounded by pretty girls in loose
tops, Joey is quite the pig, but Ross retains his composure and his
suspicion. “Your friend seems slightly
over-enthusiastic.” says the pretty boy, referred to the
caddish Joey, to which Ross deadpans, “My friend is an
asshole.” Exhausted by dancing and
food, everyone falls asleep in a big hedonistic heap on the ball room
floor, sprawled out on mats and pillows. As the moon comes up that
night, we see that these people are vampires! They show their fangs and
jump on Ross and Joey, who wake up quickly and begin to fight for their
lives. There are too many vampires, however, and it looks like this is
the end for our friends. Luckily, Rachel and Phoebe
burst into the room at this fortuitous moment, and between them and the
guys, they manage to slaughter the vampires and escape. There is
actually a funny scene at the end, as Joey has to beg Phoebe to scrape
off the last vampire girl from his back. EPISODE
1.7: "The one where they meet the Commie monks" In this episode, our four
friends are riding south on horses, into an area of Manhattan that even
Rachel has never seen before. They come across a commune of fascist
monks who worship a Commie Red bastard of a man named Godan, the
“one and only man-god“. I'm going to say that this
is the Columbia University campus, a place notable for such socialist
progressive thinking. Godan is a Ben
Affleck-looking guy with Spooky Mind Powers and a hammer-and-sickle
fetish. He has the power of telekinesis, accompanied by green glowing
eyeballs, which he uses to lift Phoebe up off the floor and spin her
around when she makes an aggressive move towards him. Godan asks them what they
are doing here. Showing a bit of cowardice, Ross and Joey quickly claim
that they are here to join the flock and that they don’t even
know the girls. Rachel and Phoebe have more guts and refuse to lie and
so are led away to be tied up and tortured by hooded monks. Godan’s consort is
a sadistically sexy little girl in a fire engine red dress, and she
goes along with them to the dungeon. Red Dress Girl clearly enjoys
watching them suffer and stands there grinning like a German dominatrix
as they are whipped and menaced with hot pokers and the like. The torture is temporarily
stopped when Godan arrives and looks them over. Rachel is taken away by
Godan and Phoebe is left to be tortured to death in the dungeon. Red
Dress Girl doesn't like that Godan takes Rachel into his chambers, and
you can tell she feels betrayed and angered. Meanwhile, Ross and Joey are
allowed to "join" and are given robes and places at the dinner table.
There they sit with the other silent monks, munching on bread and soup.
But they can't eat when the girls are screaming in agony down the hall.
We see them squirming as each tries to work up the courage to do
something to save the two women, even though they know that they are
free now and could probably sneak off at anytime and continue their
journey. This is a strong character scene for the guys, despite the
lack of dialogue. In the end, they decide that they must act. So Ross and Joey bust into
the dungeon and save Phoebe. A truly wicked and bloody fight to the
death quickly develops between them and the two torturers. As they
leave, they run into Red Dress Girl, who instead of calling the dogs on
them, offers to help! She’s pissed about Godan’s
interest in Rachel and she’s blazing with jealousy. They are
led by Red Dress Girl to Godan’s private room, where they
interrupt him just when he is about to mount a helpless Rachel. Phoebe
and the guys try and fight but the Spooky Mind Powers stop them and it
looks like a standoff again. But then (and we saw this
coming) Red Dress Girl battleaxes Godan in the stomach for cheating on
her! In his death throws, he strangles Red Dress Girl with his mind
powers and they die in a twisted embrace. Let this be a lesson to you,
people, hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. The door bursts open and the
monks surge into the room, battleaxes at the ready. Our friends escape
after Rachel rightly tells the swarm of monks that she is their new
leader now that Godan is dead. Nice. EPISODE
1.8: "The one where they meet the forest collector"
In this episode, they are in
what I assume is a badly overgrown Central Park, still traveling south
towards Lower Manhattan. The woods are atmospherically scary with
skeletons and warning signs everywhere. There seems to be no path to
follow, and they just bushwhack their way through the tangled
undergrowth, orienting by the sun. Along the way we see begin
to see the first buds of attraction between Phoebe and Joey, which is
kinda sweet as he saved her in the dungeon and all. We also see some
sparks between Ross and Rachel, but they are both too alpha-dog to
admit it to themselves. All the romances in this series seem contrived
and forced, though not as badly as the Joey-Rachel disaster in Season
Ten. And I never really liked the Chandler-Monica hookup, thought the
series jumped the shark at that point, but most people seem to disagree
with me on that. Anyway, they come across a
huge, burly, hairy guy in pink tutu, merrily skipping through the
forest. They leap on him but he's a brute and they can barely keep him
down. Why they decided to attack him to begin with is a mystery, but
they clearly wish they hadn’t now. Just then a thick,
mustardy fog rolls in, choking them and knocking them out cold. Ross
escapes by climbing a tree above the fog, but rest are captured. Tutu Guy puts on an Army
surplus gas mask and hauls the three of them off to a "green house"
made of transparent plastic. There they are put into these swinging
plastic cages, where they soon wake up. This is the home of the
“Collector”. The Collector is nut job in
a white frock coat, a Texas Rangers batting helmet, skydiving goggles,
and powdered wig. He’s all 18th Century French in his
mannerisms and speech, and looks like a John Cleese character from a
Monty Python skit. He collects animals from the woods, gassing them
unconscious with that toxic fog and then sending Tutu Guy out to gather
them up. None of our friends are too
happy about being specimens and let their feelings be known. The
Collector doesn’t seem to care, and acts like Buffalo Bob
with his victims, speaking to them in third person. Ok, Rachel thinks
quick and offers a trade, their freedom for the fabled “Uric
Crystal” (which sounds like something you don’t
want your doctor to tell you that he found in your urine sample). The
Collector agrees and frees Phoebe to go and get it. Rachel and Phoebe
wink at each other, so you know this is a trick. Later that night, once the
Collector has gone to take a nap, Rachel and Joey plan their escape.
Their plan is ingenious, with swaying cages and knocked over potbelly
stoves. It’s a tense scene as they wait for the fire to burn
through their cages, the heat getting almost too much to bare. Escape
they do, however, and they run off into the woods to locate their
missing friends. EPISODE
1.9: "The one where Ross meets the bridge guard" We open this episode with
Ross out walking alone. He reaches the outskirts of Lower Manhattan,
the land of the Norks, and comes across a muddy ditch spanned by a
wooden plank bridge. The soggy field before the bridge is littered with
junk and trash, as well as rusting tractors, bulldozers and even a
3-pounder field piece. It looks like a battle of some sort occurred
here in the past. Guarding this bridge is a
single man, who looks like he just stepped out of a Vaudeville stage
act from the 1920s. He’s dressed in a garish Popeye the
Sailor Man sailor suit fringed with gold tassels and sports an eye
patch and frizzy hair. He talks like Robin Williams in his coked-out
days and carries a long wooden staff. It’s quite possible
that the later Chandler character was originally this guy, as they are
both extremely irritating and need to be shot. Chandler (might as
well…) is not overtly violent, just damn annoying, hopping
around and badgering Ross, pestering him with questions and comical
accusations. Unable to take it any longer, Ross turns and chops off his
arm! In the weirdest bit of the series, the severed limb "grows"
instantly into a copy of Chandler! These two now start to harass Ross
further, which only makes him more irate. Putting aside good sense,
Ross then starts chopping off legs and arms with abandon, despite the
fact that as soon as he does, another Chandler sprouts up, Hydra-like,
to stand in his way. The scene ends oddly, as a
wave of Chandlers skip and prance towards Ross, fists up and permed
wigs bouncing. We are left to assume that they capture poor Ross, but
maybe not. EPISODE
1.10: "The one where they sneak into NYC" Rachel and Joey reach the
same bridge across the ditch now. They have to hide as a column of
Norks ride by on horses, giving them a good look at the Nork Leader.
It's never really clear if Rachel has met the leader before, but I
assume not. They have the same trouble
with the Vaudeville guard Chandler as Ross did, but Rachel seems to
know what to do. She and Joey toss Chandler over the bridge and onto a
minefield below. Chandler goes boom (which would seem to blow him into
pieces, which would then grown into new Chandlers, but maybe it only
works if you cut them off) and they continue on. We now get our first look at
the shattered skyline of Manhattan, which is a bad, bad, bad matte
painting. Woof, that is amateur work. Rachel and Joey work their
way into city. The streets are trashy and the walls are covered in
graffiti, and they have to dodge patrols of Norks along the way. More
fashion statements abound here, as the costume department at NBC
scoured every garage sale and flea market in town to dress the extras. They soon find a room filled
with dead-eyed slave women in iron bar cages. The beds next to each
cage leave no doubt that this is where the Norks go to have a little
"recreation". Before they can even think of releasing the women, they
have to hide as the Nork Leader and some of men come in. They don't
stay long, and as they leave, Rachel and Joey ambush the last two in
line and take their uniforms. EPISODE
1.11: "The one where they fight in the arena Thus in disguise, Rachel and
Joey follow the dozen or so Norks down into an underground room where a
long dinner table is set up. They all sit down, with the Nork Leader at
the head, and are served food and drink by a number of servant girls.
There is steak and wine and Joey for one is happy to eat up, but
Rachel, conscious of her gender, is nervous behind her mask. The Nork Leader is a parody
of General Patton, with a full dress military uniform, cape and riding
crop, and this insane Roman-style gold spiked helmet just to show us
that he has a touch of madness in him. He speaks with a regal bearing
and commands his men with strict discipline and order, and he is
clearly not someone to mess with. He tells them that they are
all “prospective recruits”, but first they must
prove their strength. So they are all taken into a dirt floor arena to
fight each other to see who gets to join the Norks. Of the twelve, only
the last two alive will be allowed to join. And now we get a quick
meet-and-greet with the Supreme Leader (the Nork Leader‘s
boss) as he presides over the fight. And so they fight like
gladiators as the crowd roars in bloodlust. The rest of them fend for
themselves, but Rachel and Joey stand back-to-back and fight as a team.
It’s no surprise, then, that soon it’s just them
and one other guy left, sparing amongst the pile of corpses and
discarded weapons. Just as they move in for the
kill, they realize that this last guy is actually Tom, also in
disguise! What the hell? Ah, I see, Tom somehow escaped the raging
Chandlers and decided independently to pose as a Nork recruit.
Coincidence! Tom then sees his sister Monica up on the stage, clearly
the Supreme Leader‘s rather unwilling plaything at this
point. The Norks in the audience figure out what is going on now, and
charge the arena floor. The Supreme Leader suddenly
stops the fight with a word. He tells Rachel that because she violated
the “Nork Laws“, the Norks will ride out and smash
her kingdom. For some inexplicable reason, the Supreme Leader then
allows all the friends (including Monica) to leave unharmed. He tells
them that the Norks will ride at sunrise, and we get the hint that the
coming battle will not be pretty. EPISODE
1.12: "The one where they fight the battle on the bridge".
Out on the bridge now as
this episode opens. For some reason that's never stated, the Vaudeville
guard Chandler is gone, which is a shame as I thought his character was
the highlight of the series up to this point. Ross, Joey, Rachel and
Monica decide to make a stand here, realizing that the bridge is a
perfect bottleneck and easier to defend than an open field. Rachel in
particular is insistent on stopping the Norks here, as she is worried
that her kingdom will fall to them if they are not stopped here. They
set up traps and such along the bridge and the road leading to the city
walls and make their plans. They make crude bows and
arrows, they piles barrels and boxes up to make barricades and choke
points, and they even dig a shallow trench and fill it with gasoline.
They also dig up some of those rusty landmines and replant them along
the road, which is pretty cool, if more than a little dangerous. Meanwhile, inside the city,
the Nork Leader gathers his troops for battle and marches out. The
Norks attempt to force the bridge, but are beaten back initially by the
mines and the traps. The Leader rallies his men and begins a patterned
assault. The friends conduct a
fighting retreat up the bridge, fending off attack after attack by the
numerically superior Norks. Flames, arrows, mines, pikes, swords,
rolled barrels and tipped boxes all take a heavy toll on the Nork
troops, but they keep coming. Then, Joey is wounded by a spear gun bolt
to the shoulder, they run out of arrows, they reach the last barricade,
and it looks bad for them. It looks very ugly now, and
we begin to fear for our friends' lives. Just then, however, Phoebe and
a troop of girl warriors show up! And they have with them the Tutu Guy!
They rout the Norks on the bridge and drive them back into the ruins.
The Nork Leader pledges revenge before retreating with his fleeing men.
This episode ends back at
the Hudson River's edge, back where the pilot episode began. After a
short but sentimental goodbye, Ross and Monica leave on the ferry,
headed back towards New Jersey and their old lives. They leave behind
Joey, who has decided to stay with Phoebe (good choice). Rachel is sad,
but she knows that Ross has to leave. And that’s the
last episode that was filmed before the series was axed. One can only
wonder what direction the series would have taken had it been allowed
to continue. Would Rachel and Ross have reconnected? Would Joey and
Phoebe stayed together? Would Chandler turned to the good side and end
up marrying Monica? We will never know, sadly. The End. |
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| Alternative Versions: | The
BBFC
say that 17 seconds were cut from the originally submitted VHS release.
I believe this is the same cut available on DVD. |
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| Connections With Other PA's: |
SHarrison Muller Jr. (Jab/Joey) was also in 2020 Texas Gladiators and Warriors of the Lost World. Gordon Mitchell (Hector?) was in Rush and Endgame. Mario Pedone (Rudolph?) was in Endgame. Executive Producer Eduard Sarlui also produced Warriors of the Lost World. Features music composed by Motorhead! PA link? "The Ace of Spades" was on Hardware. The production designer Massimo Antonello Geleng also worked on Warrior of the Lost World and 2019: After the Fall of New York (which explains a lot) Sound mixer Chris David also worked on Warriors of the Lost world and then made it big in Hollywood with plenty of big budget films under his belt. Stunt Coordinator Sergio Mioni also worked on The New Gladiators and Robot Jox (despite dying three years before it's release?). |
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| Critic's reactions: | N/A |
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| For the PA Collector: |
An important PA for your collection.
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| Countries Released: |
Difficult to know as it's so hard to track down. UK, US, Egypt, Belgium, Brazil and Germany for sure.
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| DVD Release Info: |
A basic UK DVD is available and relatively easy to track down. Cheap too! The VHS is now very rare.
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| Actual Budget/Guessed Budget: | Maybe $100,000
at the most. |
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| Our Score: |
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| Media |
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| Box Covers: | ![]() UK PAL DVD UK VHS (pre-cert with added certificate sticker) UK VHS ![]() US VHS ![]() French VHS ![]() Spanish Poster ![]() Egyptian Poster ![]() US DVD sold online (unofficial) |
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| Comments: | Post
your comments
here: She |
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| Factsheet: | Check out the: Fact Sheet | |
