Van Dammage Report: Timecop

Timecop Van Damme

Any film that came in the wake of Hard Target was always going to have an uphill battle in terms of surpassing what still stands as one of Jean-Claude Van Damme's best movies. Go for anything less than broke and it's going to feel underwhelming and tame compared to the lunacy of John Woo's North American debut.

But while the film itself may not reach the heights of its immediate predecessor, audiences were apparently still high enough on Hard Target to boost Timecop to a box office gross of just over $101 million worldwide, Van Damme's most financially successful film, a title it retains to this day. (Note: The Expendables 2 doesn't quite count since that's not really "his" movie, even if he is the best thing about it.)

Set in the far-flung future of 2004, Van Damme plays Walker, an agent for the Time Enforcement Commission, a secret government organization that polices the time stream to make sure no one goes into the past and gets rich or kills Hitler, or anything else that could cause drastic (potentially world-ending) ripples through time. Things get real messy real quick, however, once Walker learns that Senator McComb (Ron Silver), the very same Congressman who volunteered to oversee the TEC, has been going back and stealing money to provide near-limitless funding for his would-be presidential campaign.

It's a pretty goofy plot, so it wasn't a real surprise to find out that this was all based on a Dark Horse Comics mini-series, though the film's resemblance to the source material is largely superficial as it doesn't even follow the same plot. This deviation was almost certainly due to budgetary reasons. With only $27 million at your disposal, it'd be pretty difficult to convincingly travel to different eras. As such, it leaves things feeling fairly insubstantial given that the central hook is barely exploited or explored. There's a fun opening bit where a white supremacist goes back in time and uses machine guns to rob a Confederate squad of their shipment of gold and then a brief jaunt to 1929, but otherwise the time travel is limited to Walker going back to … 1994. Granted, the way time travel works in the film it'd be a little difficult for there to be a bunch of jumping from era to era, but it still feels like a pretty big missed opportunity to have most of the temporal hopping relegated to traveling back to what (at the time) amounted to the present day.

Also problematic is that Timecop calls for Walker to be sullen and brooding for most of the movie, and those aren't really qualities he can pull off in an interesting or engaging way. Instead he just kind of looks bored for most of the film. But hey, at least we get one of his most memorable execution of splits. His countertop splits are impressive enough as is, but anyone who's a longtime fan of David Letterman's run on The Late Show will likely immediately think of how the scene got spoofed by Letterman and Paul Schaeffer.

So what makes this worthwhile? Well, the concept may not be exploited to its fullest, but there's still enough inherent fun within the idea of a time-traveling police force to give the movie adequate juice and keep things afloat. There are a couple decent action beats. It's always funny to see what people thought post-2000 technology would look like (just try not to laugh when you see the cars people drive around in). But most of all, it's the late Ron Silver that makes each subsequent viewing the most fun. Silver was such a fun character actor and he had such a particular presence. It wasn't a persona, per se, but you could always expect a certain prickly quality from Silver's characters that nevertheless made them so much fun to watch. And that's no less true here, as he seems to relish the opportunity to play such an arrogant prick as McComb.

What's perhaps most interesting about Timecop, however, is in what it didn't do for Van Damme. This is his highest-grossing film, so you would think that he'd continue to seek out similar material. And yet, save for his continued dalliances with the Universal Soldier series, this was his last hard genre picture, at least in a starring role. Nearly everything else he'd tackle from here on out would be fairly straightforward action flicks. Nothing else he's done since has been as high concept as this, and this was right as his career was hitting its stride.

Van Dammage Report Statistics for Hard Target:

Number of splits: 2

Number of split kicks: 0

Reason for being European: None given.

Best line: "I should have said 'Freeze.'" Walker, lamenting to McComb that he didn't have a pithier one-liner after shattering in half a henchman frozen by liquid nitrogen.

Previously on the Van Dammage Report:
Hard TargetNowhere to RunUniversal SoldierDouble Impact,
Death WarrantLionheartKickboxerCyborgBloodsport.

Author: Stewart Smith

Writer and Bob Taylor's podcasting partner-in-crime, but mostly just a man with a possibly unhealthy obsession with movies, video games and Jean-Claude Van Damme. You should check out his video game blog, Critical Mass. He loves Michael Mann's Heat almost as much as he loves his wife. (That's, like, a whole lot. In case you were wondering.)