The Silent Force (2001) Poster

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5/10
Silencing the silent force
unbrokenmetal22 December 2008
Gangster boss Pao (George Cheung) has problems with a team of special agents called the Silent Force. He decides to make them even more silent, and permanently! 8 of the 10 agents are killed in a sudden attack, number nine is fed to a shark, but number ten escapes. Well, otherwise it would have been a short movie... Frank Stevens (Loren Avedon) decides to avenge the death of his team-mates, yet he is not completely alone as Mrs Woo (Karen Kim - smashing lady, I remember her from "US Seals II") intends revenge for the late Mr Woo, and the trail leads to the same bad guys.

What we get here is fast, violent action, the usual stereotypes: an average (not bad) genre flick. Uncredited, Matthias Hues appears in one scene to hit the hero a couple of times where it hurts. I guess it's a kind of hobby. Loren Avedon's face isn't exactly looking like granite, it probably would have helped to have a star such as Van Damme or so, but under the circumstances of a cheap production, that's the way it is.
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3/10
Dear Producers: Your low budget is showing
dave-84716 March 2010
If bad acting won awards, this flick would have a shelf full. The cutting is, at best, quite choppy.

The continuity errors are endless. The technical mistakes are too numerous to cite.

Even the fight choreography, the one thing that could have made this worth enduring, is painful. The moves are very stilted and predictable, to the point where even those untrained in martial arts can see what's coming.

The plot is VERY formula: "Man defies overwhelming odds to wreak havoc and revenge".

There is the usual gratuitous sex, and plenty of silicone enhanced topless young ladies, all designed to try and make SOMEthing in this 90 minute exercise in tedium worth watching. In the end, it all fails and you're left with the feeling that this should have gone straight to $1.98 bargain bin at the video store.

If you spent money to watch this movie you should demand a refund. I gave it a 3 out of 10 only because I like silicone.
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3/10
An insultingly dumb slog to sit through, so make sure you avoid it.
tarbosh2200026 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Frank Stevens (Avedon) is a U.S. Federal Agent who commands a special ops team known as "The Silent Force". They've come across their toughest assignment yet when they face off against some evil Asian mobsters headed by Pao (Chung). After the Pao gang kills off a bunch of Silent Force members, Stevens gets mad and goes after them, and all-out war ensues. Also Stevens tries to save the widow of one of his former buddies, Natalie Woo (Karen Kim). Will the Silent Force be SILENT...aaah, We just can't come up with a silly pun this time. This movie is just too stupid. It's not worth it...

Unfortunately, The Silent Force is pretty darn bad. It gives us no pleasure to deliver a negative review, but this movie, sadly, has very little going for it. It's very poorly and uncreatively written, the editing is abrupt and choppy, it was the late 90's/early 2000's, so many scenes are underlit and hard to see, there's plenty of student-film-style ADR work, and the whole thing is not well-structured and seems very amateurish, not in a good way. Of course, there's a lot of terrible acting, but that never bothered us too much in these low budget productions. But you add it all together...and meant to HOLD it all together is Avedon, a man who is not likable and seems to be striving against all available evidence to try very hard to be cool, and this is a surefire recipe for unmitigated disaster. The whole thing has a junky feel and it simply doesn't work.

Thankfully, this is the only known credit for "writer"/ "director" David May. Perhaps he saw this botched movie as nothing more than a stumble along the road of his life, and decided to get into another line of work. Good for him. Back in the golden era of the video store, this turkey would have been known as shelf-filler. But by its release date of 2001 (it looks like it was shot a few years earlier) those shelves where disappearing fast, and cheapo DVDs were ending up at gas stations, thus giving The Silent Force the ignominious distinction of being gas-station filler. And it's not even useful for your life, like, say, gasoline, antifreeze, or those little tree car air fresheners.

It does have some classic clichés: the BYC (Black Yelling Chief), some very dumb one-liners, and the prerequisite torture (though in this case it's pointless torture that goes on way too long - like everything else in the movie, they screwed it up and there's no sense of pacing). And not only is Avedon trying really hard to be cool, he looks like any number of different people, depending on the scene he's in. In various scenes he resembles:

  • Tom Cruise


  • Gabriel Byrne


  • Eric Roberts


  • Griffin Dunne


  • Jeff Speakman


  • Kyle MacLachlan.


Just an observation. Avedon needs screen presence that doesn't recall any other famous faces. In one of his more Tom Cruise-esque scenes, a song plays on the soundtrack that is a blatant knockoff of "Danger Zone", presumably to drive the point home. He really wants you to think of him as 1986-era Mapother. In some scenes it sounds like Avedon is reading his dialogue off paper in a studio somewhere else. Elsewhere, he seems to be taking this regrettable outing way TOO seriously. There's no balance with this guy.

A glimmer of hope arrives (way too late) when, towards the end of the movie, Matthias Hues shows up. He begins beating up Avedon and our attention perked up, as we thought it might have a saving grace. We weren't expecting a No Retreat, No Surrender 2 (1987) situation, but their fight was too short and extremely disappointing. It all leads to those same familiar questions: Who watched/enjoyed this? Did the filmmakers think this was good, or did they know it sucks?

As we all know, by 2001 the golden age of DTV was over, and if you needed any more proof of that fact, here it is. The Silent Force is an insultingly dumb slog to sit through, so make sure you avoid it.
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4/10
Mediocre at best
gridoon202423 March 2010
Loren Avedon has come a long way from the "No Retreat, No Surrender" series - unfortunately, I don't mean that as a compliment! Don't get me wrong, he's still got the moves, but he doesn't get to show them much. The best fight scene in "Silent Force" comes within the first 10 minutes, and it's actually just a sparring match between Avedon and multiple "opponents" / trainees; nothing that comes later is equally good. Even more disappointing is the fact that Karen Kim gets absolutely NO fight scenes at all; although it is mentioned at one point that she could out-fight and out-shoot everyone at the police academy, she gets captured and used as a hostage by the bad guys TWICE, without putting up much of a fight. With one exception (a man locating his own executioner through a telescope), the action scenes are uninspired, and there are parts where you're wondering if the filmmakers are going for intentional comedy (bad guy aims at Avedon from a close distance and pulls the trigger, but the gun is empty; this happens at least twice). Even Matthias Hues' uncredited cameo doesn't help much - you just keep wondering where the hell he came from, and where the hell he goes afterwards. *1/2 out of 4.
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10/10
Great low budget film making.
bad_habitt12 November 2005
This film had a shoe string budget yet it still conveyed its action story very well. Imagine if you were making a movie and had no budget but still gave it your best shot. This is exactly what this film does. Some clever writing executed brilliantly by Loren Avedon and his sidekick buddy was also pleasing.

This film also had a really cool idea of subtly including a re-match in it's 3rd act between Loren Avedon and Matthias Hues. The pair originally featured in one of the greatest showdowns in cult film history in Corey Yuen's Hong Kong classic "No Retreat No Surrender 2".

The re-match however was not very well executed. It lasted for a very short time and wasn't anywhere near as explosive and dynamic as the one of the original fight. This may have been due to Matthias Hues playing an uncredited cameo in the film. However the idea was still there.

All up I'd recommend this film to B film audiences, Loren Avedon fans and people who are thinking of making their own movie.
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