Code Of Honor
Michael Winnick
Michael Winnick
Anthony Rickert-Epstein
Michael Winnick
Michael John Mollo
Grindstone Entertainment Group
- May 6, 2016
106 minutes
United States
English
$8 million[1]
Plot[edit]
Colonel Robert Sikes is a stealthy, one-man assault team who takes on a city's street gangs, mobsters and corrupt politicians until his mission is complete. His former protégé, William Porter, teams up with the local police department to bring his former commander to justice and prevent him from further vigilantism.
Production[edit]
Writer-director Michael Winnik said he wanted to make "First Blood meets Death Wish."[2] Seagal liked the script and an earlier film of Winnik's, Guns, Girls And Gambling and agreed to make the film.[2]
The film was shot in Utah in March 2015 on a budget of $8 million.[1][3] The shooting schedule was 20 days.[2]
Winnik said of Seagal, "he's definitely the real deal... he really knows his guns, his Aikido, his martial arts, his fighting skills. You know, he's teaching you weapons, he's teaching you moves. He’s been around a long time, but his arms, his hands, they’re still lightning fast."[2]
In the movie, Seagal's character dies. Winnik says the actor was not pleased with this and "if you ask him, he didn't [die]. He escaped. That said, the implication, the way the film is structured, is that he does. Obviously you can interpret it as you wish, but yes, he does go down. And that’s kind of what he’s been saying throughout the film. 'Would you give your life to save the world if no one knew you did it?' is the question he keeps posing. He's completed his mission and he's even made the other character take the fall for it."[2]
Reception[edit]
The film received negative reviews from critics. In a review for the Los Angeles Times, Robert Abele called it "dreadful" and "laughably awful".[4] Frank Scheck wrote in The Hollywood Reporter that the film includes almost every B-action cliché, and stated that "the latest effort from the bloated, aging star is... as bland as its title."[5]