Steven Seagal in Hard to Kill.
1990s
In 1987,
Seagal began work on his first film, Above the Law (titled Nico in Europe ), with director Andrew Davis and reportedly as a
favor to a former aikido student, the agent Michael Ovitz. Ovitz took Seagal to
Warner Brothers to put on an aikido demonstration and the executives were
impressed by him and offered him several scripts; Seagal turned them down but
agreed to write what would becomeAbove the Law. Following its success,
Seagal made three more movies – Hard to Kill, Marked for Death and Out for Justice - that
were box office hits, making him an action hero. Later, he achieved wider,
mainstream success in 1992 with the release of Under Siege(1992). That film
reunited Seagal with director Andrew Davis, and was a blockbuster in the U.S. and
abroad, grossing $156.4 million worldwide.
Seagal then directed On Deadly Ground (1994). This film, in
which he also starred, emphasized environmental and spiritual themes, signaling
a break with his previous persona as a genre-ready inner-city cop. The film
featured Michael Caine as well as R. Lee Ermey and Billy Bob Thornton in
minor supporting roles. On Deadly Ground was
poorly received by film critics, but despite many critics denouncing Seagal's
long environmental speech in the film, Seagal considers it to have been one of
the most important and relevant moments in his career. Seagal filmed a sequel
to one of his most successful films, Under Siege, titled Under Siege
2: Dark Territory (1995), and cop drama The
Glimmer Man (1996). In 1996, he had a role in the Kurt Russell film Executive
Decision, in which he played a special ops soldier who only appears in the
film's first 45 minutes. He subsequently made another environmentally conscious
film, Fire Down Below (1997), wherein he was an EPA agent
fighting industrialists dumping toxic waste in the Kentucky hills, but the
movie was commercially unsuccessful. This film ended his original multi-picture
contract with Warner Bros.
Direct-to-video
work
The next year, Seagal made The Patriot, another
environmental thriller which was his first direct-to-video release in the United States
(though it was released theatrically in most of the world). Seagal produced
this film with his own money, and the film was shot on-location on and near his
farm in Montana .
After producing Prince of Central Park, Seagal returned to
cinema screens with the release of Exit Wounds in March 2001. The film had
fewer martial arts scenes than Seagal's previous films, but it was a commercial
success, taking almost $80 million worldwide. However, he was unable to
capitalize on this success and his next two projects were both critical and
commercial failures. The movie Ticker, co-starring
Tom Sizemore and Dennis Hopper, was filmed in San Francisco before Exit
Wounds, and went straight to DVD. Half Past Dead, starring rap star Ja
Rule, made less than $20 million worldwide.
All of the films Seagal has made since the latter half of
2001 have been released direct-to-video (DTV) in North
America , with some theatrical releases to other countries around
the world. Seagal is credited as a producer and sometimes a writer on many of
these DTV movies, which include Black Dawn, Belly of the Beast, Out of Reach,
Submerged, Kill Switch, Urban Justice, Pistol Whipped, Against the Dark, Driven
to Kill, A Dangerous Man, Born to Raise Hell and The Keeper, a movie released
in Japan fifteen weeks earlier than the United States.
Return to the big screen and
television work
In 2009, A&E Network premiered the reality television
series; Steven Seagal: Lawman, focusing on Seagal as a deputy in Louisiana . In 2010,
Seagal appeared in his first theatrically released film in nearly a decade, as
the main villain in Robert Rodriguez’ Machete. In 2011, Steven Seagal produced
and starred in a 13-episode television series entitled True Justice.
1 comments:
way to go :)
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