Remo Williams The Adventure Begins Full Movie In Hindi 1080p Download

Remo Williams The Adventure Begins Full Movie In Hindi 1080p Download

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Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins Full Movie In Hindi 1080p Download

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An officially "dead" cop is trained to become an extraordinary unique assassin in service of the US President.
A cop who answers a call is ambushed. The next day he is buried. But in reality he is in a hospital and his appearance has been altered. He is then told by a man named McCleary that he now belongs to "them". "Them" being CURE an organization whose job is to battle corruption. They give him the new name of Remo Williams. He then meets the head of CURE Harold Smith, who spends most of his time sitting in front of a copmuter and perusing over reports of individuals that have to be dealt with. They then give him to Chiun, a Shinanju master, which is the art of killing someone and making it seem like an accident or natural causes. Chiun's regimen is hard on him. Smith then discovers a man named Grove, who is a defense contractor. It seems that whenever there's a case against him, the key witnesses and investigators disappear. Currently a military investigator is pursuing him about his new project which for some reason, he is tight lipped about. Smith sends McCleary and Remo to help her but Grove discovers them and wanting to know about them decides to stir things up. He sends some people to take Remo out but he outwits them. And when he tells Smith about it, Smith doesn't care who then tells him that unless they have more evidence against Grove they can't do anything and if they are about to be exposed, they have to disappear. And while Smith and McCleary have made arrangements for their demise, Remo is told that Chiun will take him out. So he and McCleary have to get the evidence they need.
I can't believe that I just got around to reviewing Remo Williams. This is again one of those movies that I have been watching forever and this movie deserves repeated viewing. It is a typical corny 80's action flick and it is not mind-blowing in terms of action or special effects but it is a great ride all the same. Fred Ward turns in a great performance as Remo. I've always liked Fred Ward and he's a good underrated character actor. The supporting cast mainly just fills in the blanks but they are all competent actors. The soundtrack sets just the right mood and Joel Grey deserves special praise in the portrayal of Chiun. Chiun is the greatest and toughest character ever to be in any movie ever and Chiun could kick anyone's ass. Since Grey is white and Chiun is a stock Asian character if there ever was one it may bother some people, but I would tell those people just to get over themselves and enjoy the movie. The interplay between Remo and Chiun is funny and they have great chemistry. Bottom Line: This movie rules. I would go ahead and tell you to buy it on DVD but the powers that be have only made it available in full screen so what's the point of even having it on DVD. Damn them. Damn them to hell. Anyways, enjoy.
You know that the filmmakers have definitely done something right, when you find yourself breaking out a movie just to watch the opening credits and end up watching the whole blasted thing anyway! With, REMO this has happened to me more times than I care to count. Andrew Laszlo&#39;s photography, Craig Safan&#39;s ode-to-John-Barry-style theme and the whip-crack editing of the titles alone are enough to capture and hold your attention...and that&#39;s before anything&#39;s been blown up! And then there&#39;s the movie itself...<br/><br/>There were many afternoons I spent at the library, where I browsed through the section where there was more than a few dogeared paperback copies of &quot;The Destroyer&quot; series. (Being a Doc Savage kinda guy myself, I always took a pass. My loss.) But without having read one word of any novel in the canon, I can still give kudos to Guy Hamilton and Christopher Wood, both veterans of the Bond franchise, for doing an amazing job of bringing Sapir and Murphy&#39;s characters to rip-roaring life.<br/><br/>And with a cast like this, how could that not happen? Hard-bitten but dedicated street cop Sam Makin (Fred Ward back in his younger, butt-kicking days) interrupts what looks like a robbery/assault on the docks, and the thanks he gets for doing his job is getting a concussion and a snootful of harbor water. When he wakes up in the hospital, he finds out that a) Sam Makin for all intents and purposes has now been given a burial with honors, b) he has a newly minted face and the name &quot;Remo Williams&quot; (and you&#39;ll love how they gave it to him) and c) he has been recruited by one of those archetypal non-existent government agencies that answers &quot;only to the president.&quot; Once he&#39;s been given this rundown by his assailant/recruiter, (a wonderful J.A. Preston), his next marching orders are to execute his first assignment...by executing a bad guy.<br/><br/>But, as it did from the very start, nothing is as it seems. The &#39;bad guy&#39; is an old Korean man of indeterminate age, who proceeds to kick &quot;Remo&#39;s&quot; butt...effortlessly. This is Chuin, the man assigned to train the new recruit in the mysterious (and of course, imaginary) martial art of &quot;Sinanju,&quot; which makes you look like a cross between David Carradine&#39;s Caine and Gene Kelly! There was much controversy back in the non-PC Eighties about hiring yet another Caucasian actor to play an Asian character. All that aside, though, Joel Grey makes the feisty, irascible and quirky &#39;master of Sinanju&#39; so darn likable, the energy level of the movie even seems to drop a few notches whenever he&#39;s not around. It&#39;s a bit of a bummer when the training/bonding session between the two men finally segues into Remo&#39;s REAL assignment, but credit cast and crew for still keeping things enormously entertaining.<br/><br/>The mission of stopping the bad guys isn&#39;t really what matters here, (it involves an evil industrialist, faulty weapons, military cover-ups, kickbacks and other forms of Basic Villainy 101), but how the mission is accomplished that counts. Ward, Grey, Preston and &quot;bureau chief&quot; Wilford Brimley are all that stand in the way of baddies Charles Cioffi, Michael Pataki, George Coe, Patrick Kilpatrick and assorted henchmen in a series of chases and battles that take them everywhere from military bases, to logging camps to even the top of the Statue of Liberty (the movie&#39;s most stunning set piece.) And hey, let&#39;s not forget the radiant Kate Mulgrew as the &quot;damsel-in-distress&quot;, a naive yet tough Army major whose sense of integrity gets her into hot water with the baddies, and falling into Remo&#39;s arms more than once! Believing that a woman who is this kick-ass remarkable (not to mention the future Capt. Janeway from STAR TREK: VOYAGER) is a member of the &quot;helpless female club&quot; is really stretching suspension of disbelief, (like Chuin&#39;s Sinanju skills didn&#39;t achieve THAT already), but she plays it gamely and you go with what she has to do to commit to the character, if reluctantly.<br/><br/>But that&#39;s nit-picking. The Eighties marked the Great Revival of the good old popcorn-munchin&#39;, kick-and-punchin&#39; B-feature, and &quot;REMO WILLIAMS: THE ADVENTURE BEGINS&quot; was one of the best of the lot. I had hoped against hope that there would be a sequel, but maybe it&#39;s all for the best that it never happened. Why spoil the good will generated for so long by the original? Which is amazing, but to paraphrase Chuin&#39;s last line before the end credits roll: &quot;No...it is better than that!&quot;

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