What I Liked: A slasher picture with a cop (Robert Z’Dar (Tango & Cash)) being the villain is a cool idea. He can blend in and target unwitting victims easily. The rash of homicides causes the public to become distrustful of the police so who do you turn to for help? This is exemplified in a scene where a lady is having car trouble on the side of the road and a cop pulls up to see what the problem is. The lady is so terrified it might be the maniac cop that she shoots him dead right away. That setup is genuinely unnerving.
In general this is a fairly well made film on a technical
level. It’s shot nice, it’s well cast
and the pacing is good. However, there’s
some glaring continuity with the locations.
The setting is supposed to be NYC but there are parts that were clearly
filmed in LA with palm trees in the background and too much open space. Kinda distracting.
What I Didn’t Like: The mystery of the identity of
the killer cop and his motivation end up being kind of exactly what you’re
expecting. The story could’ve used some
sort of twist, even a small one to spice things up. Is it possible for a movie to be too straight
forward?
Tom Atkins (Lethal Weapon) and Bruce Campbell (Escape
from LA) are the two leads yet their parts feel disjointed, almost like
they’re in two different versions of the same film. Atkins is the lieutenant tasked with hunting
down the serial killer and Campbell is a cop who becomes suspect number one due
to some circumstantial evidence. They’re
given equal screen time but the focus should’ve been on one of them with the
other playing a smaller role. Or they
could’ve edited these threads together better.
The issue is we go for long stretches following only one of these guys
around and it just makes the film unnecessarily confusing. I kept forgetting about whoever isn’t on
screen at the moment because we don’t cut between the characters often enough.
Overall Impressions: This is a title movie where the name pretty much says it all similar to Snakes on a Plane or Killer Klowns from Outer Space. The script isn’t fantastic but the competent execution elevates the material. There are enough neat camera angles and notable performances to push this one to be a very watchable and fun time.
It’s not a total horror movie either which is sorta
interesting. Things start out that way
with the cop racking up a lot of bodies in the beginning but then it morphs
into a thriller with Tom Atkins trying to chase down the perpetrator and Bruce
Campbell doing what he can to clear his name of the murders. By the end we find ourselves in full blow
action movie territory with a car chase, a dingy warehouse showdown and what
looks like an extremely dangerous stunt of driving a van off a pier into the
water. It all takes place during the day
as well which again, makes it more action-y and less atmospheric.
So while I’m not convinced they utilized the cop angle to
the fullest extent it’s solid.
Definitely better than the blatant Die Hard knock off Psycho Cop Returns (sorry, haven’t seen part 1).
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