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''Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins'', also released as ''Remo: Unarmed and Dangerous'', is a 1985 American action-adventure-thriller film directed by Guy Hamilton. The film featured Fred Ward, Joel Grey, Wilford Brimley and Kate Mulgrew. The character is based on ''The Destroyer'' pulp paperback series. The movie was the only adaptation featuring the character Remo Williams, and fared poorly in theaters. It received mixed reviews from critics, although it did earn Joel Grey a Golden Globe nomination. The film and a ''Remo Williams'' television pilot〔http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0236677/〕 both credited Dick Clark as executive producer. The film was supposed to be the first of a series based on ''The Destroyer'' series of novels. A significant setpiece within the film takes place at the Statue of Liberty, which was surrounded by scaffolding for its restoration during this period. ==Plot== Sam Makin is a tough Brooklyn, New York City street cop and Vietnam-era Marine Corps veteran. He is unwillingly recruited as an assassin for a secret United States organization, CURE. The recruitment is through a bizarre method: his death is faked and he is given a new face and a new name. Rechristened "Remo Williams" (after the name and location of the manufacturer of the bedpan in Makin's hospital room), his face is surgically altered and he is trained to be a human killing machine by his aged, derisive and impassive Korean martial arts master Chiun. Though Remo's training is extremely rushed by Chiun's standards, Remo learns such skills as dodging bullets and running on water. Chiun teaches Remo the Korean martial art named "Sinanju". Remo's instruction is interrupted when he is sent by CURE to investigate a corrupt weapons procurement program within the US Army. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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