A pretty perfunctory plot with a vet in Vietnam Steve Shepard being rescued by a special ops unit, which should be oops unit as the man chosen to lead the mission has a deadly hatred of Shepherd and wants to kill him! Cue lots of running around in the jungle, South Africa doubling convincingly for Vietnam. There is plenty of action and proper explosions which are the raison d'etre for the movie and it does that element quite well. The characters though are not memorable, apart from Reb Brown but he isn't in it much sadly. He would have been a better lead than William Katt who was not that believable as the titular White Ghost. All in all, I enjoyed it.
Plot summary
July '72. Vietnam. Lt. Steve Shepard missing in action. Presumed dead...15 years later he's still there.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 17, 2016 at 02:24 AM
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Top cast
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"Get me a plane. I'm going to Thailand!"
Is it the hair?
William Katt (channeling Stallone's John Rambo) plays the title character, and his blonde permed mullet is a must see to believe. Sadly after the opening scenes of him going topless showing off his physique with his mullet in full flight, he doesn't keep the locks for much longer. Known as the white ghost by the Vietnamese, as he appears and disappears collecting the souls (their dog tags) of dead American soldiers. The American intelligence gets wind of it, and believe it could MIA soldier behind enemy lines for over 15 years and organises a rescue mission. Wayne Crawford shows up as the hired mercenary, and really chews up the scenery. However everything turns awry when we learn there's history between Katt and Crawford's characters. Reb Brown gets a minor role as the officer who organised the mission, but still manages to flexs his muscles, and becomes trigger happy in the film's dying stages.
No real surprises here; in the mould of 'First Blood Part 2' & the 'Missing in Action' films... this is a streamlined, gung-ho b-action joint done in a fast clip. Plenty of bloody carnage, and brutality as it doesn't shy away from its jungle booby traps, torture, massacres and explosions. I do find Katt an odd choice though, especially since they had Brown at their disposal. Maybe they loved his work in the horror-comedy 'House', where he did play a Vietnam Vet, or simply it was the hair? But anyway the more I think, it sort of believable In appearance because Katt's character been there for that long. Not being captured though is another story.