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  1. Marked for Death is a 1990 American action film directed by Dwight H. Little. The film stars Steven Seagal as John Hatcher, a former DEA troubleshooter who returns to his Illinois hometown to find it taken over by a posse of vicious Jamaican drug dealers led by Screwface.

  2. With Steven Seagal, Basil Wallace, Keith David, Tom Wright. A retired DEA agent is out to hunt down and take out a Jamaican drug posse that has targeted he and his family for murder.

    • (25K)
    • Action, Crime, Drama
    • Dwight H. Little
    • 1990-10-05
  3. Perhaps the strangest of Steven Seagal's earlier films, Marked For Death might seem like your usual action crime thriller from the outset with Seagal (armed with ponytail once again) playing an undercover DEA bloke who decides he wants out, but then it goes off on a bizarre tangent.

    • (10.1K)
    • Dwight H. Little
  4. Oct 5, 2020 · Marked For Death had that all, and includes some of his best sequences. One sequence where he evades capture and then takes on three men attacking simultaneously in an enclosed space is...

    • Tom Jolliffe
    • What's The Big Deal?
    • What's It About?
    • What's to like?
    • Fun Facts
    • What's Not to like?
    • Should I Watch It?
    • What Else Should I Watch?

    Marked For Death is an action crime thriller film released in 1990 and was directed by Dwight H. Little. The film served as a starring vehicle for Steven Seagal who was cast as DEA operative John Hatcher who finds himself thrown up against a vicious Jamaican drugs cartel. The film also features Keith David, Basil Wallace, Tom Wright and an early ap...

    Returning from his work in Colombia and the death of his partner, DEA agent John Hatcher retires and heads back to his home city of Chicago. Meeting up with old friend Max, they enjoy a drink together before the bar erupts into a gunfight between rival drug gangs. John arrests one of the shooters and learns from Max that the Jamaican Posse and thei...

    Seagal certainly has his fans (granted, I'm not one of them) and they'll probably get the most out of Marked For Deathwhich is possibly one of Seagal's strangest films so far. Throwing in the black magic mumbo-jumbo gives the film an oddly supernatural element though this doesn't particularly affect the action scenes. Seagal definitely has his stre...

    The Jimmy Cliff song that plays during the credits is called John Crow and was co-written and performed by Seagal himself. It's the first singing appearance by Seagal who wouldn't release his debut...
    The back cover of the DVD featured a photo from Licence To Kill of a truck performing a wheelie. Not only does this clip not appear in the movie but the Bond film is a MGM release, not 20th Century...
    The movie marked the feature film debut for Wallace, who has Jamaican ancestry in real life. His character's name, Screwface, is apparently derived from a Bob Marley song.

    Even Seagal's most fervent supporters were beginning to notice a trend at this early stage in his career. At no point is Hatcher ever in any real danger - Seagal blasts through the movie like an indestructible cardboard cut-out - and despite the kooky nature of the mysterious Screwface, you're never in doubt as to how the film ends. With the remova...

    Fans of the Ponytailed One lamenting his straight-to-video career might be fond of looking back over his earlier cinema releases but Marked For Deathis a lousy, straight-up action flick for everyone else. With an almost invisible plot beyond the initial set-up and action scenes that even Seagal can't improve, there are plenty of other action films ...

    One thing guaranteed to bring people together is a discussion about Seagal's best film to date because the answer on everyone's lips will be Under Siege. Essentially Die Hard on a battleship, the film sees Seagal square off against Gary Busey's treacherous officer and Tommy Lee Jones' demented revolutionary rocker. But the film is made with such pa...

    • 15
    • 93 minutes
    • 7th June, 1991
    • Michael Grais & Mark Victor
  5. Oct 8, 1990 · As the credits unroll for the sleek, topical and extremely violent “Marked for Death” (citywide), we watch martial arts wizard Steven Seagal, playing an undercover trouble-shooter for the...

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  7. 30 Years On: Steven Seagal in Marked For Death. Excellent movie. But man, if there's one thing that really let me down, is how he turned out. He could've been a really cool weathered badass and be the villian in today's films or something like that but instead we got neon glasses. Feels like massive wasted potential.