As recommended by Jason at RobotGEEK Cult
Cinema
"Italian
Rip-off Cinema" is a fascinating and weird little sub-genre that I've
only recently discovered. Essentially throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s a
small group of Italian filmmakers made a handful of films that
shamelessly borrowed from big budget Hollywood features. They borrowed
their plots, their looks, their action beats and sometimes even big
chunks of dialogue. Science fiction and horror films were the most
popular though they also copied a lot of action films too.
Escape from New York was reworked as
2019: After the Fall of New York.
Dawn of the Dead (marketed in Italy as
Zombi) was followed by
the 'unofficial
sequel'
Zombi 2. Even
Stallone's
First Blood was reworked as
Thunder Warrior about a disenfranchised native American instead of a Vietnam vet. Some were even so cheeky they got sued.
Shocking Dark, a rip off of
Aliens set in Venice, had the balls to originally called itself
Terminator II. And Universal actually did sue the makers of
Great White, a shark film that borrowed the entire plot from
Jaws.
These films were usually made on tiny budgets, hiring only one American
actor and filling out the rest of the cast with overdubbed Italians. I
guess a lot of people would say "why watch these when you can watch the
originals" but half the fun is seeing your
favourite movies rehashed
on
a fraction of the
budget.
Hands of Steel 
has actually got quite an original plot though it is still clearly inspired somewhat by James Cameron's
Terminator.
The film is set in a dystopian future America. Daniel Greene plays
Paco, a cyborg assassin who has been programmed by evil industrialist
Francis Turner (John Saxon) to kill a prominent environmentalist.
However, before Paco can complete the hit he is struck with a crisis of
conscience and instead he goes rogue and flees the scene. He ends up
hiding out at a diner in the middle of the desert where he meets, and
later falls in love with, a waitress called Linda. In order to make some
money he participates in arm-wrestling contests and ends up getting on
the wrong side of most of the clientele. However that's the least of his
worries, before long Turner manages to track him down to the diner and the
scene is set
for Paco
to stop running and make his final stand.

It's quite amusing to see how they
remixed
Terminator here. Paco is
essentially Kyle Reese and the T-800 combined into one character. And
like Arnie's iconic character he's programmed to assassinate an
important figure (only there's no time travel involved in this flick).
Also, Paco falls in love with a simple waitress not unlike Reese did
with Sarah Connor. They even have Paco slicing open his wrist to re-adjust his robotic skeleton just like Arnie did. There's also a little influence from
Mad Max
with the desert setting and Paco's sleeveless jacket. And it might be a
stretch but I thought the production design (which is a pretty generous
description) was trying to emulate
Blade Runner.
The reason I'm calling it generous is that the makers of this film
mainly suggest that it's the future by putting up flexi-piping
everywhere. And I mean everywhere.
Whereas James Cameron's
Terminator was about our growing obsession with
technology and where it could potentially lead,
Hands of Steel
is actually more concerned with the environment of all things. In one stand out scene
the acid rain is so bad that it starts to eat through the car Paco's
driving in! The film
has a heavy background plot about how polluted the world has become in the
future. The scientist who Paco is sent to kill at the beginning of the
film is keeping track of the world's pollution levels and obviously
Turner (representing all big businesses) wants him bumped off so that he
won't tell people about how much pollution his company has produced.
They also make the scientist both blind and wheelchair-bound to suggest
how support for such concerns are poorly-represented. It's quite a
bitter, obviously European, view of America.

The film was directed by Martin Dolman (aka Sergio Martino) who also did
2019: After the Fall of New York.
He does a decent job directing the action and chase scenes but
struggles to inject much life into the dialogue scenes. Daniel Greene,
who plays the bizarrely named cyborg Paco Queruak has probably the
easiest job of the whole cast. His stilted delivery is perfectly in
keeping with his semi-robotic nature. And John Saxon makes a great
weaselly-looking bad guy. He's not in the film for much but it's nice to
have a recognisable face. The "best" actor of the whole film has to be
George Eastman who plays a hirsute Mexican arm wrestler called Raoul who
quickly develops a vendetta against Paco. I've put best in commas
because his performance so crazy and over the top it can't be called
good but it is a lot of fun to
watch.
The story is
quite small

scale. I think I was expecting it to branch out a bit further and develop into more of chase movie (like
Terminator)
but it doesn't. I've got to say of all the subplots they could have
filled the middle portion of the movie with I'm not sure why they went
with arm wrestling. It's kind of a leftfield activity to stick in the
middle of your movie. Why couldn't they have gone with straight forward
fist fights? Anyway, that's beside the point as the arm wrestling scenes
are pretty awesomely staged. As an extra bit of danger the participants
arm wrestle next to poisonous snakes! There's also a pretty silly
subplot about two cops trying to figure out who and what attacked the
scientist. I'm not sure why they put this in. We know it was Paco and we
find out he is a cyborg from pretty early on.

Overall
Hands of Steel can't be called an important film but there's a
fair bit of fun to be
had with it. There's lots of hilarious dialogue, over and under-acting,
a couple of good gore effects and an awesome pounding synth score by
Claudio Simonetti (from Goblin). The film is mostly fun for just how
nuts it all is. You should see it for the sheer fact that's there's no
other environmentally conscious cyborg arm wrestling flicks out there. Well none that I can think of.
GRADE: B-
To read Jason's original review click here http://robotgeekscultcinema.blogspot.co.uk/2011/08/review-hands-of-steel.html