Runtime: 100 minutes
Directed by: Andrew Davis
Starring: Chuck Norris (RIP), Henry Silva, Molly Hagan, Bert Remsen, Mike Genovese
From: Orion
RIP Chuck Norris. I watched something else last night but that review will be posted early next week. I should have inferred yesterday that his hospitalization in Hawaii was serious.
Yes, I’ve heard some things, re: his political stance/how many on Letterboxd would vehemently disagree with them; there’s blissful ignorance on my part if he ever had any abhorrent beliefs. Regardless, I’m not someone who ever watched too much of Walker: Texas Ranger or even paid much attention to the memes. Rather, I’ll note that he was a great martial artist w/ multiple black belts and he starred in silly yet usually entertaining B-movies in the 70’s & 80’s. Code of Silence was seen before, but long before the days of Letterboxd; no better time for a revisit. Thankfully I had time earlier today for the revisit.
Chuck is a Chicago cop alongside the likes of Dennis Farina & Ralph Foody, a.k.a. the Angels with Filthy Souls guy from Home Alone; Foody & some other faces (including Henry Silva) would later appear in Above the Law, also from director Andrew Davis. Things go awry during a stakeout and in a plot point that will garner a reaction from at least some on Letterboxd, Chuck won’t support corrupt police officer Foody, who accidentally shot a random minority civilian but planted a gun on his corpse to cover his own behind. The racism among some cops won’t make people happy either. No wonder Foody was later cast as a gangster. Norris is ostracized as a gang war is occurring.
The movie is silly yet entertaining; after all, another plot point is a giant robot on wheels that is more “product of 80’s movies” rather than anything that to my knowledge ever existed in real life. This is not my favorite Chuck Norris yet is still a good time. Even early in his career, Davis as a director was an asset; so was the 80’s-riffic score from David Michael Frank. The film’s more a gritty thriller with car chases & shootouts than martial arts—that’s OK as Code of Silence still delivers satisfying action beats. As someone from Illinois, it was great seeing Chicago in the 80’s-many different locales were shown, including a scene on the El Train.
Chuck was acceptable when it came to acting skills, at least in Code of Silence. For those that aren’t as keen on trashy genre pictures like I am, this may be a good selection for someone wanting a Norris movie they would enjoy. I’m glad to have seen some of his cheesy yet fun B-movies in recent years; that’s why I am a little bummed he passed away, even if he reached the age of 86. To borrow a line seen on Twitter today, Death didn’t walk towards Chuck Norris to claim him… Chuck Norris walked towards Death.