Arrow Video: Demolition Man (1993) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Arrow Video

Italian-Canadian visual artist Marco Brambilla ordinarily works in 3D imaging, video installations and video art usually shown at the Museum of Modern Art or the Museum of the Moving Image.  Often creating visual spectacles of hyperkinetic synchronized art, the video artist would eventually embark on the Megaplex series involving virtual reality artistic experiences.  Working outside of the mainstream including but not limited to creating a pornographic artistic short film called Sync for the anthology film Destricted, Brambilla is the very definition of an outsider usually found in museums or art galleries. 

 
Which makes his debut feature film in the director’s chair, 1993’s Sylvester Stallone’s post-Total Recall by way of Forever Young sci-fi actioner Demolition Man, all the more profoundly baffling.  With exception of some key rapid-fire montage sequences mid-movie, this is the absolute last movie you’d ever expect from a guy who otherwise works in kinetics.  A big, bloated, goofy precursor to what would or wouldn’t continue with Judge Dredd also featuring Stallone, Demolition Man deriving its name from The Police track of the same name comes to Arrow Video in a new limited edition 4K UHD set giving fans a distinctly 90s action adventure replete with Taco Bell product placement and Blade Runner inspired dichotomies between dystopia and utopia. 


Roughneck cop Sgt. John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) will stop at nothing to capture and incarcerate violent criminal Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) until a group of hostages are inadvertently killed in the process.  Both cop and criminal are literally placed on ice, cryogenically frozen until 2032 when Phoenix reawakens 35 years later and wreaks violent havoc on a now nonviolent society unaccustomed to this kind of criminality.  Rather hastily, John Spartan is reawakened too and turned loose on a world that penalizes profanity, lacks firearms and also lacks the physical act of sex in one of the film’s funnier (and the director’s few flashy) exchanges.  Oh and toilet paper has been outlawed with only three seashells now as the butt wiping option.  Meanwhile it becomes apparent this carefully constructed utopia where hamburgers are outlawed is a dictatorship with an underground rebellion forming underneath its steps.

 
Plainly silly, garish and gaudy, clearly riffing on the Paul Verhoeven/Arnold Schwarzenegger collaboration from 1990, Demolition Man penned by Robert Reneau and Peter M. Lenkov is a 90s-action reworking of dystopian sci-fi works such as Brave New World and The Sleeper Awakens replete with a ridiculously over the top villain, futuristic weaponry and a snarky sense of humor.  A big budget flick around $80 million with remarkable set and production design, shot handsomely in widescreen by Leviathan and Alien 3 cinematographer Alex Thomson and a rousing score by Alien 3 composer Elliot Goldenthal, every dollar is on the screen in this star-studded piece.  Featuring a typically solid Stallone up against a gleefully over-the-top Snipes with sexy Sandra Bullock in tow while distinguished British actor Nigel Hawthorne plays the leader of this modern-day Shangri-La, the film also works in a Rob Schneider cameo for those who just can’t get enough of that Adam Sandler guy.

 
Opening to mixed reviews but going on to gross close to $160 million, Demolition Man good or bad was a money printer for both Warner Brothers and the film’s star Sylvester Stallone.  Part of a big toy line including Hot Wheels toy cars from the film, action figures, a video game from Acclaim Entertainment and Virgin Interactive, a Pinball arcade and eventually comics and a novelization, Demolition Man was being franchised all over.  The aforementioned Taco Bell got into it and even Sting re-recorded a new cover of the famous Ghost in the Machine track to scroll over the end credits.  At the end of the day, is the film outside all of the brouhaha actually any good?  Well it is the furthest film I’d expect from an otherwise atonal avant-garde visual artist but as a slice of 90s sci-fi action trash, it is indeed hard not to have check-your-brain-at-the-door fun with this post-Total Recall romp.

--Andrew Kotwicki