Legionnaire is a 1998 film starring Jean-Claude Van Damme as a 1920s boxer who wins a fight after having been hired by gangsters to lose it, then flees to join the French Foreign Legion. The cast includes Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Steven Berkoff, Nicholas Farrell and Jim Carter. The film was filmed in Ouarzazate, Morocco.
Plot
Alain Lefevre (Jean-Claude Van Damme) is a French boxer in 1920's Marseille, France. Alain is forced by local crime boss Lucien Galgani (Jim Carter) to take a dive in a fight.
It turns out that Galgani's girlfriend Katrina (Ana Sofrenovic) is also Alain's ex-fiancée whom he left standing at the altar. But Katrina forgives Alain, and the two hatch a plan to run off to America together.
Alain does not take a dive in the fight, but just as the escape plan is about to succeed, Alain's friend gets killed, and Katrina is captured by Galgani's men. But Alain has shot and killed Galgani's brother.
Desperately needing a new escape plan, Alain signs up for the French Foreign Legion, and is shipped to North Africa to help defend Morocco against a native Berber rebellion of Rif warriors, led by Abd el-Krim.
Along the way, Alain meets some new friends, including an African American who has fled injustice in the States, a former British Army Major with a gambling problem, and a naive Italian boy who wishes to impress his girl back home by returning as a hero.
But things will not be easy. The only real way to escape from the Legion is to survive the term of service, and the rebels have them outnumbered.
Galgani has sent his hired thugs into the Legion as well, to find Alain and get revenge for the death of Galgani's brother. In the end, only Alain stood up alive after the battle and Abd el-Krim seeing Alain's courage and determination allows him to live and told him to inform his superiors what's waiting for them if they continue the colonization. Finally the movie ends with Alain's memory of Katrina and his former friends.
Cast
Production notes
The often-recorded 1936 song "Mon légionnaire" is sung over the closing credits by Ute Lemper.
Deemed unreleasable for movie theaters in the United States, Legionnaire was released on home video despite a $35 million production budget.[1]
See also
References
External links