BLACK SAMSON 1974
Rockne Tarkington (Samson), William Smith (Giovanni "Johnny" Nappa), Carol Speed (Leslie), Connie Strickland (Tina), Michael Payne (Arthur), Joe Tornatore (Harry), C.T. (Ken Bell), Titos Vandis (Giuseppe "Joseph" Nappa)
Directed by Chuck Bail
"I want these streets clean! Real clean! I want you to go home and tell your clients this neighborhood ain't for sale!"
The Short Version: Rockne Tarkington walks tall and carries a big stick in this, one of the better of the lesser known black action pictures. Samson is all about equal opportunity, too -- taking on black and white gangsters that would pollute his streets with drugs. Tarkington is fine in the lead, but William Smith dominates the film with his jaw-dropping performance as the deranged misogynistic racist Johnny Nappa. Carol Speed overacts as usual, making all sorts of faces as if she's in a silent movie. The debut feature of the versatile Chuck Bail.
In between keeping his neighborhood free of drugs and crime, Samson runs a nightclub strip bar that happens to be located on property coveted by some local gangsters. When Samson refuses to sell peacefully, the psychotic Johnny Nappa decides to eliminate the stoic public figure and anyone associated with him.
On that note, there's not much to distinguish BLACK SAMSON from the dozens of similar movies out at the time. Still, it's one of the best of the bunch that seemed to have gotten lost in the shuffle of other films headlined by the likes of Fred Williamson or Jim Brown.
Tarkington also showed promise as a sadistic villain in the underrated, brutal, and little seen THE NO MERCY MAN (1973). One of the numerous 'crazed Vietnam vet' movies, it's a modern day western that also contains elements of the wildly popular classic WALKING TALL (1974).
"You are not paid to think. You are paid to talk. And another thing you fuckin worm! My name is Mr. Nappa to MR. NAPPA!! And don't you forget it!"
His character is also the sort of racist, comic cracker found in any number of black action pictures. But Smith's portrayal manages to trounce many of those with his little nuances, and not just his frequent hate-filled spewings of racial epithets. Even if the rest of the movie were lousy, Smith's performance makes it worthwhile; and it helps he gets lots of screentime, possibly more than Samson does.
She really got to gorge on the scenery in ABBY (1974), the black version of THE EXORCIST (1973) also starring the venerable William Marshall.
There's also some interesting themes just beneath the surface in Daniel Cady's script (this likely being his best work) involving the excitable Nappa wishing to remove Samson in the most violent way imaginable. His uncle, an aging gangster, tries to convince him to leave Samson alone, but Nappa refuses, claiming that eliminating Samson is a "piece of cake." His uncle responds with "I knew a man who choked on a piece of cake."
Chuck Bail, the director, had a varied career that spanned not only directing, but also as an actor, a writer, and a stuntman. BLACK SAMSON was his first feature, which then led to the impressive, if underrated Warner-Shaw Brothers co-production CLEOPATRA JONES & THE CASINO OF GOLD; released the following year. THE GUMBALL RALLY (1976) furthered his expertise in handling big action scenes.
The music of BLACK SAMSON is nothing memorable, although the title character does get his own theme song. The action sequences are mostly down to fist fights and some moderate car chases, but they're all well done for the most part. Like Samson himself, the film has more strengths than weaknesses. An impressive debut for Bail and a fine entry for fans of black action pictures.
This review is representative of the WB two disc set including BLACK BELT JONES, HOT POTATO and THREE THE HARD WAY.