Sallow
Rutger Hauer
Sallow

“When juggers play there is only one way to live - THE HARD WAY!”
Set in a futuristic world where the only sport that has survived in a wasted society is the brutal game known as jugging. Sallow, the leader of a rag-tag team, has played in the main Leagues before, but was cast out because of indiscretions with a lady. Now joined by a talented newcomer, Kidda, an ambitious young peasant girl, he and his team find they have one last chance for glory.
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Sallow
Rutger Hauer
Sallow
Big Cimber
Anna Katarina
Big Cimber
Mbulu
Delroy Lindo
Mbulu
Kidda
Joan Chen
Kidda
Gandhi
Gandhi MacIntyre
Gandhi
Young Gar
Vincent D'Onofrio
Young Gar
Dog Boy
Justin Monjo
Dog Boy
Kidda's Father
Casey Huang
Kidda's Father
Samchin Head Elder
Quang Dinh
Samchin Head Elder
Samchin Timekeeper
John Doumtsis
Samchin Timekeeper
Lord Vlle
Hugh Keays-Byrne
Lord Vlle
Gonzo
Max Fairchild
Gonzo
A Minor Classic. My own opinion is this post apocalyptic flic deserves to be right up there with the best of the Mad Max films, and I suspect an indifferent ad campaign doomed it from the start. I love it when a film delivers a lot more than I expected, which is what you get here. Rutger Hauer and Joan Chen are the primary players on a team of roving 'athletes' who play a brutal game involving two sides, each of which is attempting to win by being the first to spike the skull of a dog on the opposing team's post (don't ask - the origin of this 'sport' is never revealed). The winning team gets room and board, and maybe a cut of the betting. Think of it as a variation of baseball's farm system and minor leagues. Sully, Rutger's character, reached the 'major leagues' before the film begins, but due to poor judgement in choosing his bed partners, was cast all the way down to the bottom, and he's trying to make it back. The teams that get to the top are allowed to commingle with this future society's one percenters who hold all the wealth and power. They also get a vicarious thrill watching their 'sports heroes' bleed playing the game, hence the title. The film is well paced but sparse, you get to learn just enough to understand what's happening and why. Because of the context in which it is portrayed, it seems to never get dated. Almost no romantic moments, but violence? Oh, yeah. If for no other reason, the film's ending scene where Sully instructs Kidda (Joan Chen's character) what her next actions should be, elevates this above most other films in the genre. Let me put it this way - I gladly re-watch this one every chance I get. My vote - 4 and 1/2 stars.
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