If you are a die-hard fan of Michael Jai White or want to see Steve Austin looking intimidating in tactical gear, it might be worth a background watch on a rainy Sunday afternoon. Otherwise, you are better off spinning White's Falcon Rising or Austin's The Condemned to see what these legends look like when they are firing on all cylinders!
When you put the star of Black Dynamite and Blood and Bone in the same arena as the Texas Battlesnake, fans expect absolute fireworks. Unfortunately, the film runs into several structural traps common to the B-movie circuit:
: White is an exceptionally talented screen fighter and physical specimen. While he delivers a predictably solid, stoic performance, the script doesn't give him much room to breathe or showcase his top-tier martial arts skills. Chain_of_Command_2015
The 2010s were a fascinating era for the straight-to-video action market. Filmmakers were actively pairing up legendary martial artists with retired professional wrestlers, banking heavily on nostalgia and pure, unfiltered machismo. In 2015, director Kevin Carraway brought us Chain of Command , a film that on paper sounded like an absolute dream for B-movie fanatics.
: For a movie promising an adrenaline-fueled web of military betrayal, there is an awful lot of sluggish dialogue and repetitive investigation scenes that kill the momentum. 🎬 Finding the Bright Spots If you are a die-hard fan of Michael
Let's dive into why this specific collaboration did not quite live up to its explosive potential. 🥊 The Premise: Pure Action Dynamite?
Straight-to-Video Stalemate: A Look Back at Chain of Command (2015) Unfortunately, the film runs into several structural traps
: Fans going in to see Steve Austin deliver high-octane brawls and stone-cold stunners were left feeling short-changed. Austin is given remarkably little screen time and very little physical action, relegated mostly to speaking menacingly from the sidelines.