Steele Justice

Steele Justice

Movie poster
Directed by Robert Boris
Produced by Thomas Coleman
Michael Rosenblatt
John Strong
Written by Robert Boris
Starring Martin Kove
Sela Ward
Bernie Casey
Music by Misha Segal
Cinematography John M. Stephens
Edited by Steven Rosenblum
John A. O'Connor
Production
company
Release dates
  • May 8, 1987 (1987-05-08)
Country United States
Language English
Box office $1,327,740 (USA)

Steele Justice is a 1987 film written and directed by Robert Boris.

Taglines

"When the police needed someone to stop the Vietnamese Mafia, there was only one choice..."

"You don't recruit John Steele. You unleash him."

"The only law is the Black Tiger's. The only justice is John Steele's."

Plot

John Steele is a Vietnam Vet who's had trouble adjusting to life after the war. He hasn't been able to hold on to a job which includes being a cop. When his best friend, Lee who also served with him in Vietnam, and who also became a cop was killed by some drug dealers he was investigating. Steele was able to save his daughter and saw one of the shooters. He later sees him and learns that he is the son of General Kwan, another person he served with in Vietnam who was running his own deals on the side, and who tried to kill Steele and Lee but Steele not only survived but thwarted his last plan. Steele suspects Kwan is involved with Lee's death but unfortunately Kwan's a respected member of the community. And Steele's former boss Bennett is not in a rush to find the killers cause investigation reveals that Lee may have been dirty which Steele knows is not true. Steele sets out to prove Lee's innocence and to get Kwan.

Principal cast

Actor Role
Martin Kove John Steele
Sela Ward Tracy
Ronny Cox Bennett
Bernie Casey Reese
Joseph Campanella Harry
Shannon Tweed Angela
Kevin Gage Army Sergeant
Sarah Douglas Kay
Soon-Tek Oh Gen. Bon Soong Kwan
Irene Tsu Xua Chan

Critical reception

Janet Maslin of The New York Times had disdain for the movie:

Steele Justice isn't designed as a comedy, but it does earn high marks for inadvertent humor... Mr. Kove wears a Band-Aid across the bridge of his nose during much of the film, and it is by far the most expressive thing on his face...[1]

References

  1. "Original ''New York Times'' review". Movies.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
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