Marshall Lawson is the commander of an elite U.S. military unit. During an overseas assignment in Paris, Lawson loses all three of his men in a seemingly random attack on their hotel room. He takes it upon himself to investigate the attack, with the help of his girlfriend Tia and his friend Dwayne. Marshall uncovers CTX, a covert military drug so secret that an arm of the military headed by a man named Werner wants Marshall eliminated. Tia turns out to be one of the two military scientists who developed CTX. Reina, the hooker who slaughtered Marshall's team, was under the influence of CTX. The drug gives its users superhuman strength and agility, but also irrevocably drives them to violence. The other co-inventor of CTX is Aroon, now a Paris night club owner. Aroon has plans to release the CTX into the Paris' water supply, which would turn the city's residents into deranged killers. Marshall, Tia, and Dwayne must stop Aroon and Werner before that happens.
Cast
Steven Seagal as Marshall Lawson
Lisa Lovbrand as Tia
David Kennedy as Dwayne
Danny Webb as Werner
Gabi Burlacu as Tia's agent
Matthew Chambers as Seth
Vlad Coada as Tia's Agent #3
Adam Croasdell as Aroon
Mark Dymond as Phil
Florian Ghimpu as Tourist
Vlad Iacob as Tia's Agent
Ileana Lazariuc as Queen
Sayed Najem as Hitman Guard
Daniel Pisica as Lead Team Soldier
Production
Filming took place at Castel Film Studios in Bucharest, Romania from January 7 to March 8, 2006. When the film was first announced under the name Harvester, the plot description described a significantly different scenario than the one in the finished film; the villains were described as aliens with actress Ileana Lazariuc listed as "alien queen." In an email exchange between Seagalogy author Vern and co-writer Joe Halpin prior to the release of Attack Force, Halpin confirmed that although the movie had been written with a sci-fi element, it had been shot in two ways: one explained the villain's actions as the work of European mobsters, and the other explained them as the work of aliens. Asked if the alien plot elements would be present in the final cut, Halpin answered "Who knows," explaining that the producers and Seagal would come to an agreement in post-production. In the finished film, the villains are explained to be gangsters, and no reference is made to any extraterrestrial origin. Critics and fans have speculated that leaving the nature of the story unresolved during principal photography led to the pervasive use of other actors overdubbing dialogue that occurs in the finished film. Seagal's 2005 filmSubmerged appears to have undergone a similar post-production process.
Reception
The film was not very well received; as of February 2014 it had a 20% "rotten" audience rating on film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. David Nusair of Reel Film Reviews called it, "flat-out unwatchable," and "egregiously shoddy," claiming, "even the most ardent Seagal fan would be hard-pressed to sit through this monstrosity of a production in just one sitting." Seagalogy author Vern noted " does a bare minimum, the lowest amount he can get away with and still seem like the star. Not much fighting, not always appearing in his own scenes, no speeches," but goes on to note, "...I don’t agree that it’s his worst," comparing it favorably to Seagal's previous film, 2006's Shadow Man. Several reviewers complained about the perceived slapdash nature of the film, in particular the extensive use of an obvious voice double overdubbing much of the dialogue from Seagal.