I really can’t believe that I have now watched Hard Ticket
To Hawaii three times. It was the first Andy Sidaris I watched, and I had
watched it once again in with my friends after a couple of us had watched it
individually. Now that I have the whole Andy Sidaris collection, I refrained
from skipping it and watched it over for the nostalgia. After this, all of the
Andy Sidaris movies will be no ground, and I have no idea what to expect.
I quite enjoyed Malibu Express, the first of Andy Sidaris’s Bombs, Bullets and Babes series, but as outrageous as that one was, Hard Ticket has some of the most incomprehensible scenes imaginable. When it comes down to how outrageous things can get, Hard Ticket has Malibu Express beat. Ironically, Andy Sidaris even references Malibu Express to explain how these character are in anyway related, he probably could have just started from scratch. However, apparently Corey Abilene, from Malibu Express, was a formed DEA agent who became an actor. So with Malibu Express posters hanging on the wall, Corey’s, brother another DEA agent is now in Hawaii with the Malibu Express herself, and ready to take down the local cartel. Okay...
Hard Ticket is where Andy Sidaris begins the recurring theme
of secret agent women in the rest of his movies. Sent to Hawaii is a pair of
DEA agents, one of whom is apparently just a civilian in witness protection who
has chosen to go into hiding as an active DEA agent. That is an interesting bit
of crazy. While there, they uncover a large drug ring being operated in Hawaii
and set out to take it down. However, this being an Andy Sidaris movie there is
always one or two more plots unrolling, and whilst the drug bust is being
carried out, a snake has gotten loose on the island. But this isn’t your
average snake, it is “contaminated with deadly toxins from cancerous rats”. I’m
not kidding you, that is the exact line.
Hard Ticket is truly filled with an enormous number of
nonsensical scenes and I’ll list off a few later to get you enticed. The first crazy
thing about Hard Ticket is the wounds, people get shot in the chest, and one
guy takes a ninja star to a lung, and yet, it’s all fine, and they just shrug
them off. Then there is some outrageous overreactions, like when Seth spots the
snake, knowing only that it is a snake, some 20 feet away, and in sheer terror
unloads a pistol magazine on in. I just don’t get it. Then there is the scene
that first alerted me to the existence of these movies. First scene on a
youtube clip, we have our freshly arrived, DEA agents, Rowdy and Jade who are
cruising down the road, when suddenly a man in a skateboard passes them. Then
he gets in a jeep drives back ahead of them and gets back on his board. This
time however “Skater” is armed with a rifle, and for some inexplicable reason,
carrying a blow up sex doll. I mean why the hell is he carrying that. What
happens next is even more overkill, as one of our agents takes out a rocket
launcher and proceed not to just blow up Skater but also fire again at the blow
up doll as it sails through the air. What the hell.
While blurry, he does look like a young Jamie Hynemen. |
Rowdy Abilene: Jade, how bad you hit?
Jade: [with bullet hole in chest] I've been better.
Honestly, the acting in Hard Ticket is pretty bad, and seeing as I generally claim the cast gave great performance, since I can never recognize the bad ones, that is saying something. At least in Malibu Express, there was some decent acting, particularly from the star. With Hard Ticket it is all about the guns, girls and g-strings. I am a little concerned as to whether the rest of Andy Sidaris' movies will continue in this manner, and whether any will achieve the level of decency (relative term here) that was Malibu Express. Then again if they are as corny as Hard Ticket, they might be enjoyable for another reason.
I'm nor sure why Malibu Express has become my favourite. Before I started through my Andy Sidaris collection, Hard Ticket has been it. However, when it came to writing this review in comparison with the earlier, I realized that Hard Ticket is only fun for its badness, while somehow, Malibu Express, by simply trying, managed to be somewhat decent. I will continue on next weekend with Picasso Trigger, and then beyond there. In the meantime I am looking into acquiring a Malibu Express poster, although god knows why.
Link:
Hard Ticket To Hawaii IMDb
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