SYNOPSICS
Cold Harvest (1999) is a English movie. Isaac Florentine has directed this movie. Gary Daniels,Bryan Genesse,Barbara Crampton,David Sherwood are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1999. Cold Harvest (1999) is considered one of the best Action,Sci-Fi movie in India and around the world.
A bounty hunter protects his dead brother's wife in a lawless world after a comet has devastated much of earth.
Same Actors
Cold Harvest (1999) Reviews
An Excellent futuristic Spaghetti Western with Martial Arts
The video rental and sales industry has for some time given birth to a whole mess of independent and low budget action films. While most are forgettable, a few rise above the pack by offering something that big-budget Hollywood films do not. In the case of Isaac Florentine's Cold Harvest, we see the continuation of a long tradition of bringing Western martial arts action to the small screen. Florentine brings his Eastern-inspired action, lightly peppered with a certain over-the-top playfulness to the well-tread, post-apocalyptic genre and throws in a dash of Spaghetti Western sensibility. As a B-movie, Cold Harvest is a cut above thanks to director Isaac Florentine's emphasis on quality martial arts action. Akihiro Noguchi, one of Florentine's cohorts from his Power Ranger stints offers competent choreography. The concept of a bounty hunter/hero in a frontier post-apocalypse is a challenging one to pull off successfully with any budget. The few past successes like Escape from New York, The Road Warrior, and Six-String Samurai all had more to offer overall. But solely on the grounds of martial arts content, Cold Harvest, along with Jean-Claude Van Damme's Cyborg (1989) are leaders in this over-played sci-fi category. Gary Daniels fans won't be disappointed.
Standard script, but has some inventive touches
The script for "Cold Harvest" is anything but inspired. We've seen the post-holocaust setting many times before, we've seen the same kind of creeps this movie has in other movies, and the dialogue is unexceptional. (And what does that title mean? It's never explained.) Other faults the movie has includes Gary Daniels. In this movie and in others of his I've seen, he simply can't act. Still, there is still some pleasure to be found in the movie. Although this was clearly a very low budget movie, it's clear that the production team squeezed every penny out of their limited funds. The photography and lighting is very good. The movie does go by at a fairly brisk pace. And Bryan Genesse and Tony Caprari make amusing and colorful villains. But what's really good are the action sequences. I've seen other movies directed by Isaac Florentine, and I can tell you that he sure knows how to make exciting action sequences, including the ones in this movie. If you're a B movie fan, you'll probably find enough good stuff in this movie to make it worth your time.
Good fighting scenes
Gary Daniels (who is he?) is stunning as a martial arts kung fu/cowboy gunslinger/bounty hunter who becomes the hero saving the wife of his killed brother. The action - shootouts and fight scenes are incredible though not original. The acting sucks big time but that's not the point. This is one hell of a roller coaster ride. Enjoy.
Gary Daniels? Post apocalypse? Playing twins?
Gary Daniels roundhouses his way through a post-apocalyptic future where everyone dresses like it's the wild west. He's also playing twins: Roland (bounty hunter) and Oliver (wears glasses, gets shot in the head). There's plenty of motorbikes and explosions and people flying through the air and...wait! This is a nu-image film! You know what that means, right? Low-budget, predictable movies! This one, however, doesn't skimp on the blood, and unlike other nu-image films, isn't a waste of time. Things actually happen in this film. Like the tribe of scavengers who talk mystically about stuff, just nine years after the apocalypse! And Roland wasting loads of bad guys every few minutes. Why did everyone decided to go back to the ways of the wild west? Who knows, but at least they all know kung-fu, just like in the old days. Do yourself a favour - send your brain round to the shops and watch this film while drooling down your chin. You're not going to learn anything, except that in the Wild West Kung Fu future, they don't have six-shooters, they have one-hundred and fifty six shooters, considering the amount of times Roland reloaded.
was there a harvest? I must have dozed off by then
Well... This is obviously a low-budget action film. It's too highly derivative, though, to be interesting for any reason unless maybe you're interested in the further adventures of someone involved in making it. The actors weren't just mailing it in, so I give them credit: they did as well as they probably could given the boring script and low budget. Whoever did the sound effects made a humorous decision to add them to virtually every sudden movement in the entire movie, destroying any fleeting illusion of realism which might have tried to slip between the wall-to-wall physical impossibilities of the action scenes. Well, actually, there were some extended "dramatic" scenes, like where Oliver (or was it Roland? I forgot which was which already) watches his dead brother's wife bathing and is so inspired by her beauty that he tells her simply "You have a nice back." Of course, with writing like that, whatever wafts of realism might have tiptoed past the sound effects and the action sequences would have been dropped dead cold in their tracks by a head-shot like that line, in the same fashion as some of the hapless victims of the overeager gore effects team succumbed to their inevitable -- read "predictable" -- deaths. Just two more examples should suffice to illustrate the quality of the writing. First, the two main characters face off with guns, then both throw away their guns at the same time to "finish this like men" (which is actually what they say when they do it). Uh huh. Real smart, "men". Then they go on to an even sillier final "final showdown". I'll leave a shred of suspense in it for you should you decide to see this turkey and spare you a description of that face-off. But my favorite part was the handy provision of a small array of GARDEN TOOLS (including a pitchfork -- gee, wonder if/how that will play into the action? *yawn*) right outside the villain's OFFICE. In the hallway. Yeah, you know, nothing says professionalism in the evil boss industry like some garden implements close by. Remember, there's no sunshine in this post-apocalyptic world. Hmmm... bah, thinking and this movie do not mix.