
The Exclusive Interview with WWII Action-Thriller WOLF HOUND Director Michael B.Review: Dominic Sherwood Delivers a Surprising Next Level DTV Action Flick in ERASER REBORN! 35:14.I mean he DOES get buried alive inside his truck.
#LONE WOLF MCQUADE TRUCK MOVIE#
#LONE WOLF MCQUADE TRUCK FULL#
McQuade is fierce with his gun – but lethal with his black belt! When his teenage daughter’s life is threatened by hijackers attempting to steal a truck full of weapons and ammunition, the job becomes personal for McQuade. The film has hit Blu-Ray before but I have a feeling that this version will be the one that I will want to add to my collection and we have the awesome new cover art for you that you can view below courtesy of ! Lets talk about the newly announced special edition Blu-Ray of the film that will be coming out later this month from Scorpion releasing. I really was new to action and with that martial arts and that one scene alone filled my heart with all the love that I would have for the genre. McQuade and I marveled at the action set pieces and most importantly the climatic fight between him and David Carradine. Norris was at the top of his game as he played Texas renegade lawman J.J. I was around 11 years old and really hadn’t watched more adult oriented action flicks and let me just tell you that this movie opened my eyes to a whole new world. I remember it like it was yesterday and it was a Sunday night when my dad and I sat down to watch a brand new movie called Lone Wolf McQuade which starred action god Chuck Norris. Featuring a scene in which Norris, buried alive in his truck, powers out of his makeshift grave in order to kill scores of bad guys, “Lone Wolf McQuade” has not done much to soften Norris’ reputation for buffoonery.Let me just get nostalgic with you all for a moment and tell you about a time way back in the early 80’s when my family first got cable and HBO.

“Lone Wolf McQuade” is a prime example of Chuck Norris’ colossal inability to recognize the limitations of his acting skills. The story of a police officer who dies in the line of duty before being inexplicably reborn as a wise-cracking bulldog who solves crimes, the fact that “Poochinski” made it past any producer’s desk is a remarkable feat. It deserves to be listed here, however, because “Poochinski” represents such a dark place in the history of the action genre. “Poochinski” is not actually a movie, but a pilot for a television show that was never made. This take on the superhero, which starred the eccentric actor Adam West, was so hokey that it became something of a comedy classic, despite the fact that it was filmed as a dramatic action movie. You wouldn’t know it from Christopher Nolan’s hugely successful reworking of the Batman franchise, but the character was once the laughing stock of movie buffs.
