Radical Jack (2000)
Directed by: David Heavener
Cast: Billy Ray Cyrus, Dee Dee Pfeiffer, George Buck Flower, Noah Blake
Billy Ray Cyrus walked so John Wick could run — and then immediately tripped over his own mullet. This week on Dewey Pod Monster, we strap in for Radical Jack, the year-2000 straight-to-video action masterpiece that dared to ask: what if Road House, but worse? And also Billy Ray Cyrus? John and Sean wade through bad squibs, flat beer pours, and a parking lot brawl soundtracked inexplicably like Indiana Jones to bring you the full, unfiltered breakdown of one of cinema's most radical — and most ignored — action heroes.
In this episode, we discuss:
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Sweating Gravy and Pouring Flat Beer — Billy Ray Cyrus plays a bartender/drifter/ex-CIA operative who cannot pour a proper pint to save his life, throws punches that somehow produce a gallon of blood each, and builds a shed like a man who has never seen a hammer before. His mullet, however, gives an Oscar-worthy performance.
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Road House Lite and the Lamest Codename in Desert Storm History — “Radical Jack” was apparently his military callsign, and hearing it said out loud is somehow even sadder than it reads. We break down why this movie is a bargain-bin Road House clone, why the villain has about 30 seconds of screen time, and how Dee Dee Pfeiffer becomes a precision marksman in the final act with zero prior experience.
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George Buck Flower Cleans Up Poorly — The beloved character actor best known for playing bums shows up as the big bad here — clean-shaven, pock-faced, and looking like a haunted Richard Nixon. His rotten gums are more compelling than the plot.
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The Case for Radical Jack 2: Radical Harder — We make a passionate, arguably sincere argument that this should have launched a 36-film franchise. Billy Ray Cyrus is not an actor. That is exactly the point. Go in with a buzz. You'll understand.
We Also Talked About:
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Fortress (1992) (Youtube) — Christopher Lambert goes underground (literally) in a dystopian prison where a stomach bomb called the Intestinator explodes you if you cross the red line. Features Kurtwood Smith's crusty nipple and laser bars that are just red tubes.
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Supervixens (1975) (DailyMotion)— Russ Meyer's beautifully shot, aggressively booby sexploitation comedy about a sweet guy named Clint who cannot stop women from wanting to sleep with him. A deaf girl, a German milkmaid, and Charles Napier as a creepy cop. Recommended if that's your thing.
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Pink Flamingos (1972) (Archive.org) — John Waters. Divine. A competition for filthiest person alive. Eggs. An illegal adoption ring. A chicken. A real blowjob. A prolapsed anus as performance art. A licensing nightmare. Sean had to look away twice. We're not going further than that.
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Magic Merry-Go-Round (2024) (Amazon)— Think Late Night With the Devil but Mr. Rogers. The most unhinged, deranged puppet horror movie John has seen in years. Shot in 4:3. Best watched with substances if that's your thing, but you've been warned.
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Raw Justice (1994) (Tubi) — David A. Prior. Pamela Anderson. A bounty hunter. An alley. A giant prop dart used as a weapon. An RC helicopter exploding into cardboard. The Dirt Bikin' Dickheads legacy continues.
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Invasion Force (1990) (Tubi) — Also David A. Prior. Deadly Prey but lighter, less rapey, and set around a film crew being overrun by terrorists in a jungle. The MacGuffin they use to defeat the bad guys is profoundly stupid and we love it.
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