Good Guys Wear Black | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Ted Post |
Produced by |
Allan F. Bodoh Mitchell Cannold Michael Leone |
Screenplay by |
Bruce Cohn Mark Medoff |
Story by | Joseph Fraley |
Starring |
Chuck Norris Anne Archer Soon-Tek Oh Dana Andrews James Franciscus Lloyd Haynes Jim Backus |
Music by | Craig Safan |
Cinematography | Robert Steadman |
Edited by |
Millie Moore William Moore |
Production
company |
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Distributed by |
American Cinema Releasing (U.S.) Danton Films (Canada) Kinosto (Finland) |
Release date
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Running time
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96 minutes approx. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1,000,000 |
Box office | $18,300,000 (United States) |
Good Guys Wear Black is a 1978 American action film starring Chuck Norris and directed by Ted Post. This was the second film to feature Norris as the star. The film featured a first screen appearance by Norris' brother Aaron Norris and final appearances by Lloyd Haynes, Dana Andrews, and Jim Backus.
Back in 1973, one United States Senator Conrad Morgan (James Franciscus), the chief delegate diplomat in negotiating the terms of the end of Vietnam War, made a deal in Paris, France with Kuong Yen, the North Vietnamese negotiator. The deal called for Yen to release certain key CIA POWs in exchange for Morgan setting up a death-trap for an elite group of CIA assassins, known as the Black Tigers. The treaty signed, the Black Tigers were sent into the jungles of 'Nam to their unknowing demise, under the guise that they were on mission to liberate American POWs. However, the truly important thing to understand is that the negotiators failed to realize one thing: the commando's team leader was one Major John T. Booker (Chuck Norris). So, needless to say and despite all odds, Booker survives. As do the four men wise enough to have remained in his general vicinity.
Five years after returning from Vietnam, Booker, now living in Los Angeles, California, is now working as a political science professor at UCLA, donning a post-war moustache, and with a hobby of race car–driving. Booker lectures to a bunch of kids on how the war should not have happened, and that the U.S. should not have been involved. He then jokes about singing patriotic songs the following week to atone. Sitting in on one of his lectures is a bright female reporter named Margaret (Anne Archer) who starts asking some very specific questions about the botched rescue mission. It seems that someone is slowly killing all the surviving members of the special forces team.