The Jean-Claude Van Damme hockey movie Sudden Death.
You’re forgetting the part where he hugged his dash.
Can we think of Lock, Stock, & Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch as action movies? Or at least action-comedies? In that case, they both qualify.
AWOL
Quite a few Van Damme movies listed here, you think he bats for the other team?
Can we think of Lock, Stock, & Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch as action movies? Or at least action-comedies? In that case, they both qualify.
SOUTHERN COMFORT has no love scenes (although Powers Booth’s character does talk about his wife back home).
TWLIGHT’S LAST GLEAMING has not love scenes (in fact, no major female characters), but it may be more of a political thriller than an action movie.
FULL METAL JACKET has US soldiers bartering with prostitutes and pimps over price, but there is nothing that could really be called a love scene.
I haven’t seen most of Chuck Norris’ movies, but I understand he was very uptight about performing romantic scenes with women, so you probably won’t find many there. (There is sort of a love scene in LONE WOLF MCQUAID, if you count a scene of the lead characters cavorting outside with a garden hose spraying in slow-motion – supposedly, the only way the director could inject a bit of romance, considering Norri’s aversion to it.)
Steve Biodrowski
http://www.thescriptanalyst.com
John Carpenter’s The Thing has an all-male cast.
And no love scenes.
Yup. This woman prefers action films to love films any day of the week.
I’m not a “chick-flick” kind of girl.
Sheri
Ethilrist, I think you’re thinking of Mad Max. Road Warrior (aka Mad Max II) took place in a blasted, post-apocalyptic wasteland. There was no ice cream. There was an “ice cream” scene in Mad Max between Max’s wife and the evil Toecutter-definitely not a love scene. There were, however, several tender moments between Max and his wife in this first movie. The second movie, as AlbertRose remembers, had only the most fleeting references to mutual human attachment, mostly people grieving over lost loved ones. I don’t know if that would fit WBs definition of a “love scene”, and I guess we will never find out (not on this board, anyway!)
Air Force One
Mission: Impossible
Men In Black
Executive Decision
The Matrix (unless you count Trinity and Neo’s single kiss as a love scene)
Broken Arrow
Memento
Blade (unless you count the vampire getting head at the begining, but that lasts for only three seconds)
X-Men (unless you count Rogue’s coma-inducing kiss)
Rush Hour
If it has an asian lead, it probably don’t got a love scene.
- Replacement Killers
- Rush Hour 1 (but not 2)
- Romeo Must Die (The lesbians in the beginning don’t count. I don’t quite think they were in love with each other. They sure did like each other though!)
- The Corruptor
- Kiss of the Dragon
Just things I’ve noticed. Also I just noticed that if it got an asian lead, it’s probably an action movie. If it has a black lead, he’s gonna be talking slang. Finally, if it has a white lead, then it’s every movie in America (ha ha). Take 3 sociology classes in college and all a sudden I’m Hollywood’s racial conscience. Anyways, sorry for going off topic there.
I would also be willing to say that Fight Club contained no love scenes as it was merely “sport fucking”, but I suspect that’s what you meant anyways. So maybe I’m wrong.
The Great Escape is one of the all-time great films, guy films, escape films, war films, buddy films (there are a lot of buddies and other pairings), action films – whatever you want to call it.
I don’t remember any women in the picture, except for the train station scenes. And I don’t remember anything that even my lurid imagination would call a love scene.
*Originally posted by Maple Syrup *
**I would also be willing to say that Fight Club contained no love scenes as it was merely “sport fucking”, but I suspect that’s what you meant anyways. So maybe I’m wrong. **
Debatable. Edward Norton was in love with her, even if it was Brad Pitt who was in bed with her. The relationship between Norton and Helena Bonham Carter is central to the movie’s plot, even if it is a highly atypical romance.
The Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle Commando had no love scenes, even though Arnold’s costar was the luscious, delectable, legs-up-to-here Rae Dawn Chong, whom I would do in a New York minute.
My only guess as to why not is because they’re cross-race leads, which Hollywood remains skittish about, and because no one trusted Arnold with a love scene at that point in his career.
I’d cut off a foot for Rae Dawn Chong.
The Professional(aka Leon). Which is a damn good thing since the female lead was only 12 or 13 years old at the time…
Most of Steven Seagal’s movies. Go Stevie!
I’m gonna get you, sucka!
It’s been a while, but I don’t think there were any :eek:
Rambo I - XVI
Using “action” and “movie” in the loosest sense, of course.
Demolition Man.
Come to think of it, was there ever a starlet that could be paid enough to agree to kiss/make out with/emulate copulation with Stallone in any movie?
*Originally posted by elfkin477 *
**The Professional(aka Leon). Which is a damn good thing since the female lead was only 12 or 13 years old at the time… **
Ahh, someone has not seen the international version! There is indeed a very freaky love interest thing going on there, but for US release they edited the movie down to an action movie rather than a drama.
Obviously there is no sex, but there’s beyond a doubt sexual tension.
LC
Quoth Diesel:
The Matrix (unless you count Trinity and Neo’s single kiss as a love scene)
You’re kidding, right? Trinity was destined to fall in love with The One, remember? That’s how she recognized him? I might also point out, by the way, that there was definitely romantic tension in the American release of The Professional, if a bit one-sided.
Quoth soulmurk:
Come to think of it, was there ever a starlet that could be paid enough to agree to kiss/make out with/emulate copulation with Stallone in any movie?
Obviously, since his first movie was a porno.