Apocalypse Mercenaries

1987
4.7| 1h25m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 14 August 1987 Released
Producted By:
Country: Italy
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

An elite group of five mercenaries, each with highly specialised skills, who are hired to take out a German Command Center situated deep within a lime stone cavern system. Along the way to this objective, our intrepid soldiers of fortune also undertake various sub missions including blowing up an arms supply train and a German airfield.

Genre

Action, War

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Director

Leandro Lucchetti

Production Companies

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Apocalypse Mercenaries Audience Reviews

ThiefHott Too much of everything
Noutions Good movie, but best of all time? Hardly . . .
GazerRise Fantastic!
Casey Duggan It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny
Comeuppance Reviews During World War II, a special team is assembled to fight the Nazis, their mission eventually leading them to a cave in Yugoslavia where they are to find and kill more Nazis. There's Felipe Hierro (Landgren), the musclebound Rambo guy with heavy duty weaponry, Abraham Bridges, the explosives expert who blows up bridges just for practice, whose nickname is Priest because he carries around a Bible and makes up verses of his own, Mikhail Hertz, a surgeon who is also a German translator, Liam O'Connell, AKA Flyer, who can fly any plane and also is a radio expert. They're all commanded by Captain Tony Hale (Karis), whose nickname is simply "Mister". Along the way they get into plenty of scrapes with the baddies, but will their unique brand of teamwork win the day – and World War II? The whole thing starts with a montage of shooting and blow-ups from this, and perhaps other, movies, then begins the beloved "assembling a team" structure we all know and love. It was nice seeing that during WWII, which we don't see too often. Speaking of that, Karl Landgren as Hierro was the type of guy we're used to seeing in the 80's – a meatheaded, unkillable hero with big guns and snappy one-liners – but this time he appears in the 1940's. So that was nice to see. In other words, instead of an Italian jungle-set Vietnam movie, just relocate that to WWII, and there you have it.While there are plenty of blow-ups, shootings, and guys with flamethrowers, there are also some moments that are underlit and hard to see. Also, there are slow moments – we think this is because our heroes are fighting random, faceless Nazis, and there's no one, lead, super-evil baddie. There should have been one of those to help focus their mission. Consequently, there are scenes where not much happens, which are interrupted by other scenes of one of the heroes looking through binoculars and seeing footage from another movie. But there is some nice cinematography in the current footage, and the Stelvio Cipriani score, as usual for him, enhances the proceedings.At least the heroes have their own, individual personalities, which lead to some pleasantly quirky moments. Perhaps the best is when the elderly troop leader, commanding our heroes from a secret bunker, gets confused and demands to know, and we quote, "what the fradge is going on". It's a reasonable request and one that we all have the right to know. Perhaps it's like a cross between a refrigerator and fudge.After the film came out in 1987 and had a subsequent VHS release in 1988, it only came out in various European territories and, of course, Japan. It never had a U.S. release at the time, but came out here only in 2009 when it was featured on the very confusingly-titled "Inglorious Bastards 2 Hell Heroes 4 Inglorious Film Collection", put out by Video Asia. This is the same company that released the similar "Mercs" box set, and the quality level is about the same. We're not complaining about that, because VHS quality never bothered us (we actually treasure it), and we're lucky to see these rare films to begin with. Like a lot of the other movies in these collections, it has Japanese subtitles. Speaking of that, the Japanese VHS box art  strongly features Karl Landgren as the main star/hero in the fashion of the 80's, and downplays (if not downright erases) the team aspect of it all. Perhaps they were hoping Landgren would become the next George Nichols.In the end, Apocalypse Mercenaries is fine, decent, not bad, and fairly middle of the road. It won't blow your mind like an exploding hut, but you certainly won't hate it either. It has enough good moments to keep it afloat, and fits in well with other Italian-made, low-budget war epics of similar ilk.
BA_Harrison Apocalypse Mercenaries is a cheap, Italian, WWII men-on-a-mission war movie wherein a motley crew of military misfits—Mister (Vassili Karis), Fierro (Bruno Bilotta), Priest (Maurice Poli), Flyer (Thomas Rauser) and Doc (Peter Hintz)—are tasked with destroying a heavily guarded Nazi HQ located deep inside a limestone cave.On the way to their target, the group team up with a female partisan, Mirka (Marinella Magri), and carry out several smaller missions, attacking a German supply train and blowing up an airfield full of enemy planes.While the story might be formulaic, and the acting nothing to write home about, the battle scenes are great (I don't care if they've lifted footage from other films—it is integrated well enough), the scenery is stunning, and the whole thing moves at a decent lick, with almost non-stop action to keep fans of the genre happy.5.5 out of 10, rounded up to 6 for IMDb.
dbborroughs A team of soldiers (including a former priest who's a sharp shooter, surgeon who likes to kill people, a crazy pilot, a big guy with a big machine gun) are brought together to deal with some situations that are arising in Yugoslavia during the Second World War. Along the way they hook up with a female partisan, and get distracted with other objectives (a troop train disguised as a hospital train, an airfield full of Nazi planes,etc) before winning the war single handedly. Good Italian war film beefed up by footage that appears to have been brought in from another big budgeted film (its mostly well integrated- but there are some shots that don't match and break the spell for a brief instant.) The film's strength is that the film never really slows down, it just keeps moving. One doesn't have time to worry about anything (including the occasional badly integrated shot) because the film keeps going. I really liked the film a great deal because it just grabs you and drags you along with its silliness. Guilty pleasure? Very possibly. It's the sort of film that I think may end up in the rainy Sunday pile when I feel like sitting at home to watching a movie with a big bowl of popcorn. Recommended
HaemovoreRex The curse of stolen footage rears its ugly head and despoils what might have otherwise been a pretty good film here, in this Italian made, WWII themed flick. The plot concerns an elite group of five mercenaries, each with highly specialised skills, who are hired to take out a German Command Center situated deep within a lime stone cavern system. Along the way to this objective, our intrepid soldiers of fortune also undertake various sub missions including blowing up an arms supply train and a German airfield (presumably said missions included by the filmmakers to pad out proceedings somewhat).Sounds OK(ish) thus far? There's a slight problem though….Unfortunately, as mentioned previously, whenever said action scenes occur, one can't help but to notice the mismatched, grainy footage stolen from an obviously more ambitious, older war flick that is clumsily edited in!Not so good then, but I must absolutely commend the music score in this which proves to be admittedly excellent and highly memorable. In fact, seeing as the trailer also features the exact same score whilst all the best bits from the film play out on screen it is probably more judicious to sit and watch that instead.