America is ripe for terrorist attack: "soft, spineless, decadent." Ah, but they forgot about Chuck Norris, who, although no longer with The Company, has kept in shape wrestling alligators in the Everglades. We get to see two successful terrorist strikes, against a sleepy middle-class suburb and a Latino youth center, and these induce some promising paranoia. But after that, Chuck Norris pops up like magic, or a guardian angel, or Superman, or someone, to foil every effort. "For every one I stop," he admits grimly, "a hundred succeed" -- but this puny little runt of a movie communicates no sense of the scale of the operation. And indeed the Soviet mastermind (Richard Lynch) becomes so obsessed with his nemesis that, when the latter is taken into custody for vigilantism, the former masses his entire forces to eliminate him. Guess what. It's a trap. Directed by Joseph Zito. (1985) — Duncan Shepherd
This movie is not currently in theaters.