Filmed on the same weekend and in the same location as Urban Menace (1999), this offering from Albert Pyun suffers from the same disastrous lack of filmmaking talent as its counterpart. In fact, this one is probably even worse. The dreadful rap music soundtrack is even louder and more persistent, the film (if this is possible) is even more incoherent and non-existent with regards to its plot, and the one redeeming feature of Urban Menace (1999) is not present here – the hilarity Big Pun struggling to breathe as he reads his lines off an auto cue.The Wrecking Crew (1999) dir. Albert Pyun
Filmed on the same weekend and in the same location as Urban Menace (1999), this offering from Albert Pyun suffers from the same disastrous lack of filmmaking talent as its counterpart. In fact, this one is probably even worse. The dreadful rap music soundtrack is even louder and more persistent, the film (if this is possible) is even more incoherent and non-existent with regards to its plot, and the one redeeming feature of Urban Menace (1999) is not present here – the hilarity Big Pun struggling to breathe as he reads his lines off an auto cue.