Marked for Death: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[The Cameo]]: Reggae singer Jimmy Cliff is performing in a Jamaican club performing the song "John Crow". [[Celebrity Paradox|Bizarrely]], the song was written for the movie, and actually includes the lyrics ''"Screwface you know that your time has come! [[Foreshadowing|You don't live right, you gonna die tonight!]]"''. Is Jimmy Cliff omnipotent??
* [[The Cameo]]: Reggae singer Jimmy Cliff is performing in a Jamaican club performing the song "John Crow". [[Celebrity Paradox|Bizarrely]], the song was written for the movie, and actually includes the lyrics ''"Screwface you know that your time has come! [[Foreshadowing|You don't live right, you gonna die tonight!]]"''. Is Jimmy Cliff omnipotent??
* [[Cryptic Conversation]]: Hatcher has this with Screwface's mistress when he seeks out information on the drug lord's whereabouts.
* [[Cryptic Conversation]]: Hatcher has this with Screwface's mistress when he seeks out information on the drug lord's whereabouts.
{{quote| '''Mistress:''' Screwface have {{spoiler|two head and four eyes}}, and ''that'' is the secret to his magic.}}
{{quote|'''Mistress:''' Screwface have {{spoiler|two head and four eyes}}, and ''that'' is the secret to his magic.}}
* [[Did Not Do the Research]]: Implies that 1) all Jamaicans are Rastafarians, 2) Rastafarianism is interchangeable with Voodoo, and 3) "Jamaican Posse" is the name of one specific gang as opposed to a coalition of Mafia-like gangs.
* [[Did Not Do the Research]]: Implies that 1) all Jamaicans are Rastafarians, 2) Rastafarianism is interchangeable with Voodoo, and 3) "Jamaican Posse" is the name of one specific gang as opposed to a coalition of Mafia-like gangs.
** The first point is subverted in the last third of the film, when the good guys go to Jamaica. It turns out that Jamaican society is, in fact, quite diverse, and not everybody is a [[Dreadlock Rasta]].
** The first point is subverted in the last third of the film, when the good guys go to Jamaica. It turns out that Jamaican society is, in fact, quite diverse, and not everybody is a [[Dreadlock Rasta]].
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* [[Sword Cane]]: Screwface employs one as his weapon of choice.
* [[Sword Cane]]: Screwface employs one as his weapon of choice.
* [[Villains Out Shopping]]: In one scene, Screwface is playing dominoes with some of his boys and is wearing what can only be described as a [[The Cosby Show|"Cosby sweater"]]. [[Villainous Breakdown|Then he gets word that]] [[Berserk Button|one of his major henchmen has been killed by Hatcher]]...
* [[Villains Out Shopping]]: In one scene, Screwface is playing dominoes with some of his boys and is wearing what can only be described as a [[The Cosby Show|"Cosby sweater"]]. [[Villainous Breakdown|Then he gets word that]] [[Berserk Button|one of his major henchmen has been killed by Hatcher]]...
* [[Welcome to the Caribbean Mon]]
* [[Welcome to the Caribbean, Mon]]
* [[The Windy City]]: It's suburbs, at least.
* [[The Windy City]]: It's suburbs, at least.


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[[Category:Films of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Marked for Death]]
[[Category:Marked for Death]]
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 00:22, 3 October 2020

One thought he was invincible, the other thought he could fly. They were both wrong.

Marked for Death is a 1990 action film Steven Seagal in his third starring role.

Seagal plays DEA agent John Hatcher, who has just retired and returned to his home in Chicago following a drug bust in Columbia in which his partner was killed. His experiences have left him disheartened; he believes that there is no way the drug flow could ever be stemmed. Alas, a confrontation breaks out between him and some goons of the Jamaican drug-dealing ring Jamaican Posse who are flooding the streets with drugs. The next day, some members of the gang including its leader, Screwface (Basil Wallace), shoot the daughter, Tracy, of John's sister Melissa (Elizabeth Gracen) in a drive-by shooting. Screwface then returns to Jamaica. John, alongside old friend Max (Keith David) and Jaimacan cop Charles (Tom Wright), embarks on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge through Chicago and eventually Jamaica to take Screwface out.

Though not quite so famous as Above the Law or Hard to Kill, this film is one of Steven Seagal's better ones; a fine example of his brand of action and which showcases him at his limb-snapping, wisecracking best.

Not to be confused with the fanfic.

Tropes used in Marked for Death include:


  • Bad Boss: Screwface.
  • Backup Twin: After Hatcher decapitates Screwface, he learns Screwface had a twin brother.
  • Bond One-Liner: "I hope they weren't triplets."
  • Boring Invincible Hero: Seagal, as always. Well, maybe not 'boring', but definitely invincible.
    • The "invincible" part is violently tested versus Screwface #2.
  • The Cameo: Reggae singer Jimmy Cliff is performing in a Jamaican club performing the song "John Crow". Bizarrely, the song was written for the movie, and actually includes the lyrics "Screwface you know that your time has come! You don't live right, you gonna die tonight!". Is Jimmy Cliff omnipotent??
  • Cryptic Conversation: Hatcher has this with Screwface's mistress when he seeks out information on the drug lord's whereabouts.

Mistress: Screwface have two head and four eyes, and that is the secret to his magic.