Search and Destroy (1979) Poster

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7/10
Vietnam revenge comes to Niagara Falls ............
merklekranz6 November 2019
Take the "Maid of the Mist" tour boat, great Niagara Falls photography, and drop in a solid Vietnam revenge story. What you get is a surprisingly entertaining film, "Search and Destroy." Perry King and Don Stroud are the targets for a former War buddy, who is now their Vietnamese enemy seeking revenge after being left for dead. George Kennedy heads the not so helpful police. The movie is exciting and a terrific score is another plus. "Search and Destroy" is one of those films that, although clearly a "B" movie with an obvious limited budget, manages to greatly exceed expectations. It's worth me pounding the table for those who appreciate this type. I guarantee you will not be disappointed, and you may even wish to tell others about your unknown film discovery. - MERK
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5/10
Goodnight Saigon. Good morning, Niagara Falls!
Coventry30 August 2022
The late 70s and early 80s spawned quite many "Vietnamsploitation" movies; - about rough, tough, and preferably mentally traumatized 'Nam veterans running amok on American soil a handful of years after their return from the Asian jungles. Usually they are good guys, ridding the big city streets of thugs and drug dealers, and occasionally they're the ones going on a psychotic killing spree. "Search and Destroy", by the underrated cult-director William Fruet ("Death Weekend", "Baker County USA"), is something different altogether. Here, the Vietnam war simply continues where it left off, expect that it moves to the beautiful area of Niagara Falls.

The plot is very simply, but effective and doesn't put too much energy in providing a detailed background. Former members of an elite squad are stalked and killed, and the last two remaining soldiers, Kip and Buddy, find out the assailant is a Vietnamese political prisoner they were supposed to escort through the jungle, but they left them for dead during a chaotic airstrike attack. Now he's after them during the peak of the Niagara Falls tourist season, and the local police forces want to avoid negative publicity at all costs.

In all honesty, I expected "Search and Destroy" to be better and more exhilarating. The vets, although neatly portrayed by Perry King and the awesome Don Stroud, aren't the most sympathetic characters, and their opponent - the unknown Jong Soo Park - isn't a memorable or menacing villain at all. The best roles come from the Niagara Falls cops, notably George Kennedy and Tony Sheer, and the real show-stealer of) this film are obviously the breath-taking filming locations. Promoting the beauty of Niagara Falls and inserting publicity for the popular tourist attractions, like a boat trip on the Maiden of the Mist, all this was possible in 70s exploitation cinema!
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Vietnam War spills over to the home front
lor_2 January 2023
Filmed in 1978 and showing its age, "Search & Destroy" is a monotone action film which instead of offering diversion attempts to conjure up the bitterness of Vietnam War veterans in a standard vengeance format. Grim, humorless nature of most of the pic bodes ill on the grind circuit.

Simple plot line begins in 1968 when a Vietnamese official (Park Jong Soo) being escorted by a U. S. Special Forces unit refused to aid a wounded G. I., looking out for his own skin instead. The G. I.'s four buddies were understandably angry and left Soo behind to face the VietCong alone.

Picking up 10 years later, Soo, (with disfigured hand encased in black glove as audience identifier), is in the U. S. methodically killing off the quartet. Last two survivors, Kip (Perry King) and Buddy (Don Stroud) are ambushed at Niagara Falls by Soo early in the film, leaving Buddy paralyzed and Kip fighting mad. Film's last hour is the one on one war, with local cops powerless and Kip's girlfriend (Tisa Farrow) listening to Kip's resentful pronouncements concerning the "unfinished war".

Photogenic views of Niagara Falls are the main interest in "Search & Destroy". Canadian helmer William Fruet gets a couple of kung fu fights over with early on, packing bulk of the pic with unconvincing automatic weapons battles and Buddy Van Horn-guided chases around town. Cast performs adequately, though Soo's villain is expressionless and lacking in the required hint of menace.

My review was written in June 1981 after Midtown Manhattan screening.
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4/10
Fun
BandSAboutMovies8 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Members of an Army unit that served in Vietnam are turning up dead in Los Angeles and Niagara Falls. Ex-Colonel Kip Moore (Perry King, man, I'm way behind in saying that King was in some awesome stuff, but come on - Mandingo, Bad, The Possession of Joel Delaney, Lipstick, Class of 1984, The Clairvoyant - let's all recognize him for his genre stuff!) is trying to figure out who it is after his friend Buddy Grant (Don Stroud) is shot and left paralyzed.

The cops, however, think that Moore is the killer. The real killer turns out to be a man with one black glove and missing fingers, so...is this a giallo? Well, Kip has to investigate the killings himself. And seeing how vets came back from Vietnam feeling like strangers in a strange land, not to mention Tisa Farrow is in the cast which lends a bit of Italian feel to this, I'd say it's really close but it's more action than psychosexual murder movie.

As for the cops, George Kennedy leads them, but come on. We all know that Kip is going to be the one to solve the case.

Director William Fruet worked with Stroud on Death Weekend and went on to make Spasms, Funeral Home, Baker County, U. S. A., Killer Party, Bedroom Eyes and Blue Monkey.

If you wanted to go to Niagra Falls in 1979 and never did, just watch this movie. You'll get to see all the tourist spots. Also: I will watch anything with Tisa in it.
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8/10
Pre-Rambo
rinke197114 June 2006
Search And Destroy was one of the first "post Vietnam vet" movies, and was one of the best. It wasn't about a super-human green beret who can kick everyone's butt, but rather a story of revenge. The music in the movie, especially the end title sequence is nothing short of great. Perry King was excellent in the film, and I followed all of Don Stroud's movies afterward to see if he did anything 'martial art' after. The movie is suspenseful, with a villain who will stop at nothing until everyone dies, and really brings out the primal feelings in keeping yourself and those you love around you, alive. This was one of my top movies from the 1970's.\classicalloy
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8/10
A solid and exciting revenge action thriller
Woodyanders9 September 2007
Warning: Spoilers
1968, Saigon: An elite group of army soldiers leave their Vietnamese political officer guide Nguyen (well played by Park Jong Soo) behind after they get ambushed by the Vietcong. Ten years later the embittered Nguyen tracks down and kills the various squad members. Among the targets of Nguyen's lethal wrath are tough take-charge former leader Kip Moore (an excellent performance by Perry King) and his rowdy, rugged best pal Buddy Grant (a typically fine and robust Don Stroud). Capably directed in a mean'n'lean straightforward style by William Fruet, with polished cinematography by Rene Verzier, a steady, snappy pace, several rousing action scenes (a protracted martial arts fight between Buddy and Nguyen rates as the definite stirring highlight), a driving, pounding, throbbing hard-rock score by FM, gorgeous Canadian locations (the Niagara Falls looks absolutely breathtaking), engaging main characters, a harrowing climactic cat and mouse chase on the streets of a crowded city, and nice supporting turns by Tisa Farrow as Kip's concerned girlfriend Kate Barchel, George Kennedy as no-nonsense detective Anthony Fusqua, and Tony Sheer as Fusqua's jerky partner Frank Malone, this bang-up little sleeper overall makes the grade as a solid and satisfying revenge action winner.
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8/10
Underrated revenge film
dentdntn-544-84282715 February 2020
I'm always really shocked about how low some films score considering the crap that Hollywood churns out today. Sure its low budget and definitely wouldn't be made today considering Hollywoods lack of faith in making something a bit different from buddy buddy cop films. Basically the premise is that a bunch of Vietnam vets are being killed off. The assailant is shown quite quickly onscreen but that doesn't detract from a series of cat and mouse chase sequences that are both tense and filmed very compently. The issue from others but not in my opinion is that the killer doesnt have the kind of pulling power of say Sly Stallone in Rambo. To me the characterisation in this film is more than one dimestional as I feel Rambo is. A Rambo clone this isn't. It's a enjoyable film of set pieces with a really good story of revenge. The final scenes where the killer is chasing the remaining characters through the big city is really good. If you do happen to find a copy of this film. Watch it. You might discover a hidden gem. Recommended!
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