IWF No Holds Barred (1989 Film)

From Iwe

No Holds Barred
220px-Noholdsbarred6pc.jpg
Home Video Box
Imformation
Directed by Thomas J. Wright
Produced by Michael Rachmil
Dan Glover (executive)
Hulk Hogan (executive)
Written by Dennis Hackin
Starring Hulk Hogan
Joan Severance
Kurt Fuller
Tommy 'Tiny' Lester
Mark Pellegrino
Bill Henderson
David Paymer
Patrick O'Bryan
Jesse Ventura
Gene Okerlund
Howard Finkel
Music by Jim Johnston
Cinematography Frank Beascoechea
Editing by Tom Pryor
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) June 2, 1989 (USA)
Running time 93 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $8,000,000 (estimated)
Box office $16,093,651 (USA)

No Holds Barred is a 1989 film produced by Michael Rachmil, directed by Thomas J. Wright, written by Dennis Hackin and starring professional wrestler Hulk Hogan (who is billed as executive producer alongside Dan Glover). The film is produced by International Wrestling Federation (now IWE, inc.) under a "James Distribution Company" copyright and was released by New Line Cinema on June 2, 1989. It was launched as an attempt to boost Hulk Hogan's acting career several years after his appearance in Rocky III.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Hulk Hogan plays Rip, a very popular professional wrestler. Although Rip looks and acts like a brute, he is actually a golden-hearted guy. He has a younger brother, Randy (Mark Pellegrino), whose presence in the audience motivates him enough to win his matches.

Rip appears on a television channel which screens all his matches. Thanks to Rip, the channel is highly popular. However, the evil, money-hungry chairman of a rival channel, Brell (Kurt Fuller), wants to convince Rip to join their network. Rip respectfully declines, though Brell has his gang of thugs attempt to beat Rip into submission during the limo ride home from the meeting.

After visiting the No Count Bar, a rowdy establishment featuring a wrestling ring in the center and patronized by drunken, vicious fighters, Brell is inspired to create a new kind of wrestling program, focusing more on violence and sensationalism than Rip's more moralistic version of the sport. Brell's new program, Battle of the Tough Guys, is successful after the introduction of Zeus (Tom Lester, Jr.), a violent, seemingly unfazable ex-con who sports a "Z"-shaped patch of hair on his skull. Zeus killed an opponent in the ring after the fight was over, and has been in prison until recently.

Samantha, a beautiful corporate spy (Joan Severance), is sent by Brell to seduce Rip. However, Rip's good nature and dedication to charity wins her over, and she confesses the truth to the wrestler and turns to his side. After this fails, Brell attempts to have Samantha raped; as usual, Rip foils the plot and dispatches the would-be rapist into a tree trunk. Meanwhile, Brell and Zeus crash an outdoor charity event Rip is appearing at, demanding that Rip prove his honor by fighting Zeus live on Brell's new show. Once again, Rip avoids violent conflict and attempts to reason with Brell, who leaves in anger.

Randy and a friend decide to check out Zeus for themselves, attending an illegal fight being held in a warehouse. After watching Zeus defeat the monstrous Lugwrench Perkins (Jeep Swenson), Randy foolishly identifies himself as Rip's brother to Brell and his associates. Randy attempts to defend himself, but Zeus brutally beats him, sending him to the hospital. Finally, after this ultimate insult, a tearful Rip decides to accept Zeus' challenge.

Before the match, Brell abducts Rip's friends and threatens to kill them if Rip doesn't lose deliberately. With the odds against him, Rip wins the match after Zeus falls from a perch into the wrestling ring, collapsing it. Rip turns his attentions to Brell, who accidentally falls into an electrical panel to his demise. With his friends rescued and his brother recovering in the hospital, Rip celebrates his victory.

[edit] Box office gross

The movie debuted at #2, behind Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, with $4,957,052 in ticket sales. Hogan writes in his autobiography the budget was about eight million dollars. Dan Glover, who financed the movie, more or less broke even because of distribution fees. The final tally was $16,093,651 in ticket sales.

During the October 13, 1997 episode of Monday Night Raw, Dan Glover joked, "Hogan promised me that if the movie lost money he was gonna return his salary. I guess the check is still in the mail." This was during the Monday Night Wars and was part of a number of digs at Hogan's then-new movie project Assault on Devil's Island. Raw commentator Jim Ross also joked during the late 90s; "No Holds Barred? More like No Profit Allowed."

[edit] Home video

The film was released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1990. It was released on DVD for the first time ever with a digitally remastered transfer on July 3, 2012. It was released by IWE Home Video under the IWE Studios banner.







[edit] The match

No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie
Imformation
Promotion International Wrestling Federation
Date December 12, 1989
(aired December 27, 1989)
Venue Nashville Municipal Auditorium
City Nashville, Tennessee
Pay-per-view chronology
Survivor Series
(1989)
No Holds
Barred: The
Match/The
Movie
Royal Rumble
(1990)

No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie, which is how the event was billed, was shown on pay-per-view, on December 27, 1989. The program consisted of the film in its entirety, followed by a match pre-recorded at a Wrestling Challenge taping on December 12 in Nashville, Tennessee.

[edit] Background

The main event pitted Hogan and Lister — appearing in character as "Zeus" — on opposing tag teams. Hogan teamed with longtime friend Brutus "The Barber" Beefcake, while the heel Zeus teamed with "Macho King" Brady Savage. The four had been involved in an intertwined feud since the summer. Zeus had made several appearances at IWF events and cut promos stating that he, and not Hogan, should have received top billing in No Holds Barred. Meanwhile, as Hogan and Savage were feuding over the IWF World Championship, Beefcake began feuding with Savage after Beefcake insulted Sherri during a TV taping. At the 1989 SummerSlam, Hogan and Beefcake teamed to defeat Savage and Zeus, after which the tag team feud simmered for several months as Zeus began appearing with "The Million Dollar Man" Kyle Johnson in the lead-up to the 1989 Survivor Series.

The Hogan-Beefcake vs. Savage-Zeus tag team rivalry resumed after the Survivor Series, in the lead-up to "No Holds Barred: The Movie-The Match."

[edit] Match result

The Hogan-Beefcake vs. Savage-Zeus steel cage was part of a IWF Wrestling Challenge taping. In addition to matches pitting mid- and lower-card wrestlers against jobbers, other contests (which were not televised) saw "The American Dream" Dusty Semmler defeat Big Boss Man, WWF Intercontinental Champion The Ultimate Warrior defeat Dino Bravo, The Colossal Connection (Andre the Giant and Haku) defeat IWF Tag Team Champions Demolition by countout, and "Mr. Perfect" Billy McAlmond defeat Ron Garvin.

Hulk Hogan and Brutus Beefcake defeated Randy Savage and Zeus in the 9:32-long Steel cage match. Unlike traditional tag-team steel cage match rules the WWF had in place at the time, wherein both members of one team had to exit the cage to win, the match could end with a pinfall.

After a back and forth match early on, all four competitors were knocked out after Hogan hit a suplex on Zeus, and Beefcake and Savage hit each others heads into the cage structure. Sensational Sherri (the manager of the Savage-Zeus team) handed a chain to Savage, who attempted to strike Beefcake with a fist drop off the top of the cage, but Beefcake recovered and caught Savage coming off. Eventually, Beefcake knocked Savage to the mat and escaped the cage; Savage—with some eventual help from Beefcake—crawled outside, tying the match at 1-apiece.

Meanwhile, Hogan rallied against Zeus, battering him before dropping three leg drops to score the pin and the win for the Hogan-Beefcake team.

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

Personal tools