Vor drei Jahren verhaftete Danny O'Brien einen Serienmörder junger Frauen, bekannt als The Terror. Als The Terror aus dem Gefängnis entkommt und seinen Amoklauf wieder aufnimmt, ist O'Brien ... Alles lesenVor drei Jahren verhaftete Danny O'Brien einen Serienmörder junger Frauen, bekannt als The Terror. Als The Terror aus dem Gefängnis entkommt und seinen Amoklauf wieder aufnimmt, ist O'Brien der einzige, der ihn aufhalten kann.Vor drei Jahren verhaftete Danny O'Brien einen Serienmörder junger Frauen, bekannt als The Terror. Als The Terror aus dem Gefängnis entkommt und seinen Amoklauf wieder aufnimmt, ist O'Brien der einzige, der ihn aufhalten kann.
- Ginger
- (as Karen Witter)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesIn the undercover scene when Danny is cooking eggs, he is introduced as Carlos, which is in fact Chuck Norris' real name.
- PatzerWhen Simon takes the Chap Stick and graphite and puts it on the dental floss he supposedly cut through the bars in very little time. Theoretically impossible.
If it were graphite, a lubricant, that would be correct. However, it is actually grit, as is used in rock tumblers and sand blasters. It would take a long time and a lot of dental floss, but is theoretically possible.
- Zitate
Man at food stand: [Danny O'Brien is undercover and acting like a short order cook when he gets an unsatisfied customer] These are the worst eggs I've ever had, man!
Danny O'Brien: Wait till you try the toast.
- SoundtracksTwo Can Be One
Music by David Michael Frank (as David M. Frank)
Lyric by Robert Jason and Denise Osso
Performed by Joe Pizzulo and Stephanie Reach
Perhaps aiming to follow his 80´s action counterparts Stallone and Schwarzenegger into lighter, more thoughtful roles as his career and body aged, Chuck here offers a portrayal of a stoically humble (whilst still Corvette-driving), soft-spoken and self-effacing LA detective, made famous for his apprehension of animalistic serial killer Simon Moon (the eponymous "Terror" of the film´s gaudy title) and dubbed "Hero" for his actions by an euphoric media, a handle he chafes at given his own near-death at the sizable mitts of Moon (a voiceless Jack O´Halloran). When Moon escapes captivity and new victims bearing his trademarks (snapped neck, partial undressing) begin cropping up in LA, this Hero must face his large lumbering demons and track down the seemingly motiveless juggernaut that is his nemesis the Terror.
Methodically paced, shot with a flat televisual look and peopled with regular 80´s TV character actors, the film has a noticeable Movie of the Week flavor, right down to the underplayed action sequences, low level of gore and jokey final shot, a feeling not even the gruff charm of Steve James (criminally underused) and the presence of Ron "Superfly" O´Neal as the city´s mayor can fully erase. Director Bill Tannen creates a strong sense of atmosphere, and stages Chuck´s domestic scenes (given surprising prominence in the narrative) with professional skill but his handling of linking scenes is flat-footed, and his rather detached approach to the loosely choreographed action dissipates whatever tension they might otherwise provide. Chuck looks visibly bored in the film´s few de rigueur fight sequences, and actually more engaged in the romantic scenes with his heavily-pregnant partner (Brynn Thayer), whose level of character development far exceeds any other in the film´s under-nourished screenplay.
Despite the picture´s modest ambitions, obvious low budget, sluggish plot, cliched dialogue and mostly underplayed performances, it still remains strangely watchable; the serial killer plot mostly goes nowhere but Chuck has an amiable charisma, and it´s enough of a surprise to see him play a self-doubting family man averse to the public spotlight his own heroism brings, that it almost draws you along through the film´s many flat sections. The unlikely casting of Billy Drago as Moon´s psychiatrist, the atmospheric setting of LA´s Wiltern Theatre (which becomes Moon´s hideout and stalking-ground), the presence of Steve James and Murphy Dunne (of the Blues Brothers band) in supporting roles and the much-sampled, pleasingly old-fashioned score by David Michael Frank provide helpful distraction from the clumsy script, and Tannen displays just enough visual aplomb to make it an acceptable late-night diversion, if nothing more.
- owen-47103
- 30. Sept. 2021
- Permalink
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- La calle del terror
- Drehorte
- The Wiltern - 3790 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(Interior and exterior. Wiltern theatre scenes.)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 5.301.200 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 1.840.487 $
- 28. Aug. 1988
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 5.301.200 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 36 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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