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      Wheels of Fire

      R 1985 1h 25m Sci-Fi List
      Reviews 35% 500+ Ratings Audience Score A psychic and a bounty hunter (Laura Banks) help a hero (Gary Watkins) rescue his sister (Lynda Wiesmeier) from a wasteland road gang. Read More Read Less

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      Wheels of Fire

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      Critics Reviews

      View All (1) Critics Reviews
      Jason Shawhan Nashville Scene Santiago also directed Wheels of Fire (streaming on Prime), a 1985 journey into anxiety that is steeped in deeply retrograde gender theory and some genuinely inspiring flamethrower effects. Sep 10, 2021 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (9) audience reviews
      harry r Don't bother unless you want to see bare breasts. The movie should be title Wheels of Molasses. Even with the eye candy, you'll wish for it to be over far quicker than it is. No real plot other than bouncing boobs with no purpose. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member Released by Roger Corman's New Concorde studios, this is a darn good rip-off of "The Road Warrior" from prolific Filipino director Cirio H. Santiago. Producer/director Santiago was known for his exploitation films, starting out in the 70s with a series of Blaxploitation films and then in the 80s focusing on low-budget Vietnam War pictures. Here Santiago takes to the desert areas of the Philippines (I never knew there was such a thing or maybe they were rock quarries) for a Max Max ripoff that tells the story of a nasty post-apocalyptic biker gang names the Highway Warriors who kidnap the sister of our hero who vows to bring her back and take the nasty gang down! It's a super cartoony of science fiction and action film, but Santiago knows his way around an action sequence and his film features more car chases than most of the Max Max knockoff, which is a major asset to the film. It also helps that the costumes and cars more closely resemble those from "The Road Warrior" than most of the low-budget knock-offs. The film also features an early score by Christoper Young ("Entrapment" "Swordfish" "Drag Me to Hell") who at this point in his career was scoring low budget exploitation films this, "Def-Con 4," "Avenging Angel" and "The Dorm That Dripped Blood" before moving onto more prestigious of film work. Despite its no-name cast, this was a pretty enjoyable warriors of the wasteland tale and is recommended for fans of this low-budget subgenera. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/31/23 Full Review Audience Member I have absolutely have to see a Filipino rip-off of the Road Warrior, you might as well make it this one. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/23/23 Full Review Audience Member Glorious post-apoc nonsense with exploding cars, rockets to space and Morlocks below the surface. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Audience Member Back in a dark corners of second hand stores, right behind the DVD shelves, you will most likely find piles and piles of dust covered VHS tapes. And among all those tapes hidden between the dozens of copies of Mission: Impossible and Jurassic Park is sometimes hidden gems like Wheels of Fire. That's exactly how I landed a an ex-rental copy of seemingly forgotten Post Nuke flick. Finds like this makes me keep checking out second hands stores as I love finding old video tapes of bizarre and obscure films that have yet to make it to DVD. The tape I found of Wheels of Fire was so old that the glue on the title tag had disintegrated and thus fallen off the tape. The clerk even remarked that I must be one of those collectors of rare VHS tapes and even knocked the price down to a $1.00. A $1.00 for some forgotten 80's post nuke drek was a perfect price to me! Wheels of Fire was one of those dozens and dozens of post nuke flicks that filled the videos store shelves in the 80's and it is one of the dozen's that still hasn't made its way to DVD. The post nuke/road warrior genre was dominated by the Italians but it would only be matter of time before Filipino director Cirio H. Santiago would jump on that band wagon (the same way he copied the Italians with their Macaroni Combat releases which in turn copied American films). Still out of all the Road Warrior rip-offs I have seen, none is more of a rip-off than Wheels of Fire as our anti-hero looks just like Mad Max and he drives a vehicle shocking similar to Mad Max's famous interceptor. It looks so much like the Road Warrior that it really could take place in the same alternate Universe. Our anti hero meets up with his sister and new boyfriend at a gladiator fight and in order to save her boyfriends life, he jumps into the fight to kill the opponent. This results in a high speed chase on a desolate highway. His sister ends up being captured by a ruthless gang that terrorizes the highways, and our anti-hero with the help of a warrior woman, a psychic, and a midget (what film isn't made better with a midget?) try to rescue her. The film's look and presentation is exactly like The Road Warrior, only dumber. Wheel's of Fire really acts like Road Warrior's cousin that was dropped too many times on his head as a kid. The first thing that makes it dumber than the Road Warrior is that almost all the chase scenes have the film sped up to unconvincingly give the illusion that the cars are going faster. Road Warrior did utilize this technique a few times but not to this extent. Our characters also have talks and make love at VERY inopportune moments. Our hero and his sister fight about her boyfriend when the road gang and closing down on them fast. Get and your cars and get away damnit! His sister and boyfriend even take time to stop and make love when they damn well know the road gang is right on their tail. Let's just say the boyfriend finds out the hard way that he should have kept his hormones under control. The film tries to distance itself from the Road Warrior by introducing a cannibal group of underground humanoids that resemble Morlocks from The Time Machine. It's an interesting section of the film that really comes out of left field. I also like how director Cirio H. Santioago utilized a unique World War II fort complete with huge cannon's as the gang's headquarters. He would utilize this location in what seems like every film he filmed in the 80's (including Eye of the Eagle and The Expendables). Wheels of Fire knows it's a Road Warrior rip-off and doesn't try to hide it so I give it respect for that. It knows what it is and for a silly 80's post nuke flick I found it rather enjoyable and to be honest it was a lot better than I thought it was going to be. It is definitely the best film from cult director Cirio H. Santiago that I've seen, that's for sure. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/17/23 Full Review Audience Member When Santiago gained access to a playboy model, he really went with it. So much rape. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A psychic and a bounty hunter (Laura Banks) help a hero (Gary Watkins) rescue his sister (Lynda Wiesmeier) from a wasteland road gang.
      Director
      Cirio H. Santiago
      Screenwriter
      Frederick Bailey
      Production Co
      Rodeo Films
      Rating
      R
      Genre
      Sci-Fi
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Aug 23, 2017
      Runtime
      1h 25m
      Sound Mix
      Surround
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