Hip Hop beats vs Cult Classics! Can I Kick It? screens cult classics and contemporary martial arts/action favorites while DJ 2-Tone Jones live scores the film, scene-by-scene, with a blend of genres such as hip hop, soul, and funk.
Who doesn’t love a Steven Seagal movie? Whether it’s your guilty pleasure, or you just love a hero on a mission, with their blend of action, martial arts, and a sense of righteous vengeance, he always provides a high level of entertainment and escapism.
Marked for Death is a 1990 American action film starring Steven Seagal and was directed by Dwight H. Little.
Disillusioned with his violent life as a government drugs-buster, Steven Seagal goes to confession from a priest who advises him to discover his “gentle self” at which – hey! – the tough guy goes back to the family home in Chicago to stay with his sister and her daughter.
Things, however, have changed drastically on his home turf where a Jamaican posse, for example, now openly deal in drugs outside the old high school. Seagal’s old pal, school football coach Keith David, is outraged and wants to do something about it, but big Steve has lost all interest in trying to change things for the better.
An emerging drug war between the Jamaicans and the Columbians quickly forces him to reconsider his position, however, and, not entirely surprisingly, he soon finds himself tackling a gang member in a night club, meaning that the Jamaican bad guys in turn pay a visit to his sister’s house and mark him for death – hence the title – in a strange voodoo ritual.
Comparable with, say, vintage middle period Dirty Harry, the plot may be the thinnest of excuses to get our pony-tailed hero back into action, but once he’s there the film follows its own internal logic of moving him efficiently enough from one arm-smashing confrontation to the next.
One of Segal’s earlier works Marked For Death offers a very proficient range of bang-and-break antics ending with a neat twist.
Creative Alliance’s film program is sponsored in part by the Maryland Film Office.