![]() ![]() Donald Sutherland as Lock Up’s evil Warden Drumgoole. I understand that our penal system is a shit show, (I read the New York Times and am therefore m’f’ing informed), but even this stretches the limits of the imagination. The warden also exists in a prison system that would then somehow permit the transfer of the prisoner (from a minimum security facility) back into his custody. Instead of being fired, the warden gets reassigned to a hellhole maximum security prison where his further misdeeds can go even more unnoticed. That he was then incarcerated for a very long time and eventually escaped said prison because the warden (Donald Sutherland) committed unspeakable acts against his inmates. Sylvester Stallone’s Frank retaliated against a bunch of goons that beat the owner of the body shop in which he worked. If we are to go along with Lock Up‘s absurd premise, we have to accept a series of absurd events that take place even before the events of this film. Sylvester Stallone confronts the bully (Sonny Landham) trying to take his lunch money in Lock Up (1989). ![]() We love the 1980s and the 1980s loves us back with entertaining mid-budget refuse like this. The result is a film that adheres to an outdated model of filmmaking, the delusional B-movie that masquerades as top-flight entertainment. Both hit all the predictable, necessary, and occasionally delicious 1980’s cinema beats. While Lock Up plays like a stripped down Escape Plan (2013) prequel, it has the distinct benefit of featuring Stallone without a shred of self-awareness and a nefarious prison warden played by Donald Sutherland. That said, I’m still surprised I’d somehow sidestepped the movie entirely considering I watched everything indiscriminately during the late 1980’s. And by less than stellar, I mean steaming pile of prison-cell fungus. Indeed, I’d never bothered with Lock Up due to it’s less than stellar reputation. Maybe I don’t need to put an expiration date on this, after all… Netflix DVD, those fine distributors of physical media, came through with a copy of LOCK UP, delivered to my door.Ī Sylvester Stallone movie from the 1980s that I hadn’t seen? I suspect foul play based on reputation. So I went ahead and devoted a sleepless evening hyped up on non-drowsy antihistamines to watch Sylvester Stallone’s Lock Up (1989) which had just arrived from Netflix DVD. ![]() I got a new freelance job a few months ago and I’ve been struggling to make time with my own writing. I still haven’t seen My Left Foot, for example, and that’s a problem. I’ve discovered some gems, but I also still have a bunch on my “must-watch” list that just haven’t been handled. I’ve watched around 65 movies from that great year. Alas, reality has clubbed me upside the head as I’ve taken stock of my year of #Watch1989. I’d have watched a few dozen movies from 1989, discovered some gems along the way and completed a handful of chapters (all of them?) in the manuscript about the Summer of 1989. At that time, however, I anticipated having felt some sense of closure. According to the original tenants of the program, my 1989 movie marathon would conclude on December 31st, 2019. Even when the inmates are friendly to each other this film still feels horrible, yucky and depressing.Your body has to be here, but your mind can be anywhere.Īs I watched my latest 1989 film, Lock Up, I began contemplating the future of the #Watch1989 enterprise. A rather pointless game of rugby played in muddy and disgusting conditions by male prisoners and constant fighting and disagreements. The acting is basically horrible, no decent scenery except outside of a prison and inside and convicts being killed inside the prison walls and stabbings occuring. A horrible film, not even enjoyable, the acting by all involved is second rate and something of value like a car boot sale. Stallone the prisoner gets transferred by Donald Sutherland without any reason or explanation and Sutherland makes Stallone's life hell behind bars. A horrible film, not even enjoyable, the acting by Lock Up is a prison drama starring Sylvester Stallone, Sonny Landham and Donald Sutherland. Lock Up is a prison drama starring Sylvester Stallone, Sonny Landham and Donald Sutherland. ![]()
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