Also known as Killers Die Hard and Gun Fighter, the title of this movie pretty much tells you the main reason to watch this movie.
It's really about a crime boss named D'Angelo (Lloyd Bochner, The Lonely Lady),who is smuggling drugs inside cigars, because that seems like the best way to move plenty of product inside the smallest delivery mechanisms possible. One of his smugglers is a student named Ken Wilson (Luke Halpin, who was on Flipper - and stay tuned for why that's important),who one night gets in an argument with his girlfriend Tina and ends up accidentally killing her. D'Angelo's men make it look like an overdose, which would be enough in any other reality to get Ken away with it, but Tina's brother is Andy (pro wrestler Ron Slinker, who helped train The Rock, gave RVD his name and was the stepfather of Dennis "Mideon" Knight),a cop on the drug enforcement squad.
The real excitement of this movie comes in when we meet Mr. No Legs himself. He's played by Ted Vollrath, a Lancaster, PA native and U.S. Marine veteran who lost his legs after thirteen years after surviving a mortar shell explosion during the Korean War. Despite what some would see a set-back, Ted still became a karate Grand Master and acquired black belts in several disciplines of the martial arts. In 1971, he founded the Martial Arts for the Handicapable Incorporated. He pretty much makes this movie with his extended fight sequences and gimmick-laden wheelchair.
If you don't think Mr. No Legs isn't cool enough, how about the fact that he hangs with a guy named Lou, who is played by Rance Howard (Smokey Bites the Dust),the father of Clint and Ron?
Somehow, this movie was able to round up plenty of old movie stars - who one presumes all moved to Tampa, Florida where it was made - including former husband of Shirley Temple John Agar, Richard Jaeckel and Templeton Fox, while also finding plenty of martial artists, including Jim Kelly from Enter the Dragon and a smaller version of him named Tiny Kelly.
Speaking of Florida, this movie feels grimy and sweaty. Much like other Sunshine State scumtastic blasts of insanity like Satan's Children, the films of Bill Grefé and My Brother Has Bad Dreams, everyone in this movie doesn't look like anyone you'd see in a Hollywood big budget film. Even the character actors in it have moved on to leading man status just for being in this with them. There are several scenes in bars where nearly every person looks meaner and more dangerous than the next. It feels like murder, sex or murder after sex could happen at any minute.
There are plenty of fights, like one between women who have smashed beer bottles and knives that ends up with nearly everyone in the bar dead and another where a Stingray Corvette faces off with a maniac with a sword. But the real standout is any time Mr. No Legs is on screen, whether he's firing a throwing star out of his chair, shotgun blasting folks or diving into a pool to kill off two henchmen sent to dispatch him.
That said, there's plenty of padding, like the band Miracle playing in a club and a ten-minute car chase that ends up smashing into a wall of ice that has a bad guy only loosely tied to the rest of the story. As I grow older, however, I admire these non-sequitur moments, as one looks at old wallpaper in a house that is otherwise completely modern.
Oh yeah - Flipper. Mr. No Legs was directed by Ricou Browning and written by Jack Cowden, who previously created that family-friendly TV series. Cowden also wrote Island Claws and ended up as the script supervisor on Band of the Hand, The New Kids and Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach. And yes, that's the very same Ricou Browning that was in the suit as The Creature from the Black Lagoon and was the second unit director on Thunderball*).
But man, the real star of all of this is greasy and flopsweat laden Florida.
*Browning and Cowden would also work together on Island Claws and Police Academy 5. I also never knew that Browning did second unit on Caddyshack.
Mr. No Legs
1978
Action / Drama
Mr. No Legs
1978
Action / Drama
Keywords: drugsgangkung fugunexploitation
Plot summary
In 1970s Florida, crime boss D'Angelo is smuggling and distributing drugs concealed inside cigars and inside sacks of loose tobacco leaves. His top enforcer is Lou aka 'Mr. No Legs'. Lou has lost his legs in an accident and uses a wheelchair to get around. However, he is a dangerous man due to his fighting abilities and a pair of shotguns built into his wheelchair armrests. Among the people working for the organization is student Ken Wilson who needs money to pay for his tuition. During a domestic fight with his girlfriend Tina, Ken accidentally kills her. In panic his solicits the aid of the crime outfit he's working for. The outfit sends two men to take Tina's body and make it look as if she overdosed. But they kill Ken, fearing that Tina's disappearance would attract the police's attention to Ken and eventually to their organization. Nevertheless, Tina's 'overdose death' is investigated by the police. Tina's brother, Andy, is a drug squad detective. After he is informed of his sister's death, Andy and his partner Chuck, who knew Tina wasn't into drugs, start an investigation of their own. As they put the pieces of the puzzle together, the two detectives get closer to D'Angelo's drug operation, to his 'Mr. No Legs' top enforcer and to a mysterious 'dirty cop' working inside their police department.
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Directed by the a man from the Black Lagoon!
"This is the liveliest morgue I've ever been in!"
Screenwriter Jack Cowden came up with a great gimmick for this otherwise routine exploitation-action flick, which receives decent-enough direction from Ricou Browning, the man best known for playing the Creature from the Black Lagoon. It's full of consistently amusing stuff that makes it good entertainment for an hour and a half, including that classic cliche, the bar room brawl, and a scene where various thugs try to take out our title character and fail spectacularly.
Korean War veteran Ted Vollrath plays the role, and indeed, he was a paraplegic whose legs had to be amputated after he sustained serious wounds during the war. Fred / "Mr. No Legs" is the principal enforcer for a drug kingpin named D'Angelo (Lloyd Bochner, "The Lonely Lady"),and he has NOT let his disabilities get him down; rather, he's proficient at martial arts, and has a shotgun-equipped wheelchair, to boot. Two police detectives, played by Richard Jaeckel ("Grizzly") and wrestler Ron Slinker, in his only movie role, determine to take down D'Angelos' organization.
Other familiar faces such as Rance Howard ("Chinatown"),Luke Halpin ('Flipper'),and John Agar ("Tarantula") turn up in this agreeably silly and lively trash flick. The filmmaking is overall on the crude side, but Browning does know how to deliver a solid action climax as Jaeckel and Slinker and various incompetent cops pursue one of the antagonists. Due to the fact that we have a couple of familiar and reliable character actors in this thing, the acting is definitely a bit better than one might ordinarily have to tolerate. It's a hoot to see these guys here; Jaeckel and Slinker have a fairly good chemistry.
"Mr. No Legs" does get off to a great, hilarious start early on with a ridiculous fight scene playing out behind the opening credits. And it remains watchable throughout, with violence aplenty and some good laughs to be had.
Seven out of 10.
Mr. No Legs
After thirty five years of searching for this movie I finally found it! I was an extra in the movie, the girl selling drugs from the catering truck. After years of joking about being in a movie to my son and family,I can now show them my thirty seconds of my show business career. I enjoyed watching it and remembered the fun of that day. Filming for the scene I was in was in Tampa, Florida at the Lowry Park Zoo,in 1975. Originally I was told that the name of the movie would be Pushers Die Hard or Killers Die Hard, it was not decided. Thanks to the internet and searching the actors, Mr. No Legs, was found. It may not be a classic but what a story to tell the grandkids, grandma sold drugs off of a catering truck.