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IMDbPro

Señales peligrosas

Título original: Bad Channels
  • Video
  • 1992
  • R
  • 1h 28min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.1/10
1.7 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Señales peligrosas (1992)
ParodyComedyHorrorMusicSci-Fi

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAn alien determined to capture human females takes over a radio station to do it.An alien determined to capture human females takes over a radio station to do it.An alien determined to capture human females takes over a radio station to do it.

  • Dirección
    • Ted Nicolaou
  • Guionistas
    • Charles Band
    • Jack Canson
  • Elenco
    • Robert Factor
    • Martha Quinn
    • Aaron Lustig
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.1/10
    1.7 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ted Nicolaou
    • Guionistas
      • Charles Band
      • Jack Canson
    • Elenco
      • Robert Factor
      • Martha Quinn
      • Aaron Lustig
    • 22Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 50Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos144

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    + 138
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    Elenco principal41

    Editar
    Robert Factor
    Robert Factor
    • Willis
    Martha Quinn
    Martha Quinn
    • Lisa Cummings
    Aaron Lustig
    Aaron Lustig
    • Vernon Locknut
    Michael Huddleston
    • Corky
    Roumel Reaux
    • Flip Humble
    Paul Hipp
    Paul Hipp
    • Dan O'Dare
    Rodney Ueno
    • Moon
    Sonny Carl Davis
    Sonny Carl Davis
    • Peanut
    Charlie Spradling
    Charlie Spradling
    • Cookie
    Steve Tietsort
    • Trucker
    Ron Keel
    Ron Keel
    • Grits…
    Alex Bookston
    • Mr. Baker
    Daryl Strauss
    • Bunny
    Michael Caldwell
    • Goofy Guy
    Allison Gammon
    • Goofy Girl
    Ania Sava
    • Katrinka
    Victor Rogers
    • Sheriff Hickman
    Michael Deak
    Michael Deak
    • Cosmo
    • Dirección
      • Ted Nicolaou
    • Guionistas
      • Charles Band
      • Jack Canson
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios22

    5.11.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Infofreak

    One of the stupidest movies ever made with no entertainment value whatsoever!

    'Bad Channels' is one of the worst SF/horror movies ever made. It's so boring and unfunny that you could almost think it was directed by Ted V. Mikels of 'Blood Orgy Of The She-Devils' fame. In fact it was directed by Ted Nicolaou who previously made the useless 'TerrorVision'. Now that was one lame so-called comedy, but this one is even worse. Getting through to the very end was a real chore even with the fast forward on the remote in constant use. The other guy responsible for this crud is Jackson Barr who also scripted 'Trancers 2' (a.k.a. 'Future Cop 2'). Now that wasn't the greatest movie ever made but at least it was entertaining. I don't know what went wrong here but it's really one to miss. Even a soundtrack by Seventies Rock Gods Blue Oyster Cult and some allegedly "clever" parodies of music videos (a generic 80s hair band, a grunge thing, and a sorta Mr. Bungle/Primus one) can't save this utter waste of time. Paul Hipp (an Abel Ferrara semi-regular) leads a mediocre cast, which includes former MTV Veejay Martha Quinn and various other nonentities, in a ridiculous tale of aliens taking over a radio station with the plan of capturing Earth women, shrinking them and placing them in bottles. Why are they doing this? Who knows. Who cares. There is ONE, count 'em, ONE laugh in this whole movie and that is a cameo by b-grade legend Tim Thomerson, and that doesn't even happen until AFTER the final credits. This movie stinks on ice. Avoid at all costs!
    djen303

    80's glam rock meets 90's rubber aliens!

    This is by far, one of the silliest movies I've ever had the pleasure of seeing. I mean, it was so asinine I just *had* to rent it on three separate occasions to prove to different groups of friends that such a monstrosity could be made! It was released in 1992, but feels more like it was made in 1982!

    The `hero' is the `bad boy' or radio, Dangerous Dan O'Dare. Dan treats his listeners to publicity stunt after publicity stunt, with the odd 80's glam rock song thrown in for good measure. An alien lands in what appears to a giant novelty light-up yo-yo and proceeds to take over the radio station which just happens to have a nation-wide broadcasting range on frequency 66.6.

    The alien uses the radio signals and the sound of Dan's voice to target young women listening to the station, and capture them in little glass tubes. However, before the women are transported, they hallucinate that they're in music videos which take place in the locations they're at. There's nothing funnier than seeing some rockers straight out of the 80's appear in a diner and try to give a convincing performance.

    Naturally, a movie of this calibre is full of holes. Dan figures out pretty early on that his voice was being used to target the women, but instead of shutting up, he goes on and on describing the aliens and telling people not to listen, which, of course, they ignore and keep on doing.

    I laughed at the cliché small-town cop who must have been paid a set amount each time he discredited the alien's existence. The entire town he's patrolling says they saw an alien, and several of the women were reported having vanished into thin air. But this cop chalks it up to them all being drunk or something. Even when he sees the alien first hand he gives the `sarcastic cop' routine, and tells everyone to move along.

    The `music videos' are all terrible, covering all sorts of the least favourable genres. Glam rockers invade the diner, a grunge band causes a ditzy cheerleader to seductively gyrate during band practice, and the crème de la crème, Psychotik Sinfony performs a clown metal piece in the hospital, causing a nun to mosh and play bass guitar.

    Back in the operating room, the doctor is operating on a patient who earlier was infected by the alien fungus. When the nurse suddenly disappears, the patient bolts up in amazement. Which begs two questions; what kind of doctor lets his nurse listen to Dan O'Dare while he's performing delicate surgery, and why the hell didn't he use any anaesthetic on the patient!?

    The climax is about the least exciting thing in the whole movie. Dan accidentally discovers that fungicide hurts the alien, and the radio station just happens to have a whole box of it! Dan frees the women by randomly playing with the alien's controls and the alien splits open revealing a weird Venus-flytrap-like monster within. Together, Dan and the women they stand around within arm's reach of the alien and spray it with fungicide in the least dramatic way possible. Dan tries to liven things up by shouting `die you rat ba**ard' a few times, but it has no effect.

    The reason for the alien capturing the women is never explained, nor does anyone ever consider looking for the space ship that landed only about a mile away. If the radio station was broadcasting nation-wide, why were the only people being abducted from the surrounding town? And how did the alien infect the guy at the beginning before it had even landed?

    I could go on for ages, but it'd simply be easier if you were to go out and rent it yourself. You'd at least expect the movie's description on the box sleeve to at least attempt to make it sound like a scary sci-fi horror feature, instead touts it as a `hilarious rock and roll adventure of sci-fi comedy'. You know something's wrong when even the box sleeve doesn't take it seriously.
    7Cardcaptor_Jim

    Bad Channels, Good Time!

    There's a new DJ in the town of Pahoota, shock jock Dangerous Dan O'Dare (Paul Hipp). He's about to bring some rock'n'roll to the former polka channel KDUL Superstation 66.6. A pretty reporter (former MTV VJ Martha Quinn) is covering the story for a TV network when she sees a UFO. Of course, no one believes her. Dan finds out she's telling the truth when an alien that has a head that looks like a blue-black cauliflower with a window set in front, and his robot minion, take over the radio station. The alien has come to Earth to shrink women and place them in bottles using Dan's voice to pick the best-looking female listeners. Each woman the alien wants experiences a rock fantasy, much like a music video, that others can't see. Yes, really.

    This admittedly silly Full Moon film is a sci-fi rock'n'roll comedy, and it delivers the goods with pretty girls, great music and some laughs too. No one will call this movie a classic, but it's fun in a "check your brain at the door" sort of way. The music is pretty awesome. There's a heavy metal song (with Ron Keel), a grunge rock song and, my favorite, "Manic Depresso" by Sykotik Sinfoney, a silly song with guys in clown, cow and nun outfits. Yes, really.

    The acting is fairly good, although some actors are a bit over the top. Ted Nicolaou's direction is competent, if uninspired. The music score is by the rock band Blue Oyster Cult. Those who normally skip the end credits may want to know that the final joke takes place after the credits. (Of course, you might need to be a Full Moon fan to really appreciate it.) When Cinemax broadcast this movie back in the 1990s, they unfortunately cut out the final scene. A movie titled DOLLMAN VS. THE DEMONIC TOYS is a sequel to DOLLMAN, DEMONIC TOYS and BAD CHANNELS simultaneously. (Actually, this "sequel" changes the ending to BAD CHANNELS, and it's not good at all.) The DVD includes an 11 minute featurette (a condensed version of "Videozone".)

    Although this movie is hard to recommend to the average movie lover, I found it to be highly entertaining.
    BHorrorWriter

    Early Classic from Full Moon!

    Yes, of course the movie is campy, ridiculous, pointless and under budget. But it is a gem in the Early full moon vault. I love it! Own it and watch it from time to time. IT makes me chuckle. Much better than many of the Recent jokes Full Moon is releasing.....Hard to find...however, check Ebay....

    6 out of 10
    5Foggy-7

    Camp, Pure Camp

    Well, you certainly won't expect Citizen Kane renting this movie, but it's mildly entertaining. Martha Quinn really needed to have a better agent, given this and other career killers, but her chemistry with Paul Hipp (Dangerous Dan O'Dare) is enjoyable. The goal of the rest of movie is one thing pure and simply: titillation, and it doesn't accomplish that. The rock video visions, which I'm sure were intended to give a rock-n-roll edge to the movie, simply detracted.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      In a 2017 interview with Video Fugue, Ted Nicolaou spoke about what convinced him to make the film: "I avoided Bad Channels for years. Charles Band kept saying, 'You wanna do Bad Channels? You wanna do this movie about a monster in a radio station?' And I was like, 'No! F**k no! I just did TerrorVision (1986), about a monster in a TV, and it almost ruined my career!' But at a certain point, I was just like - 'Okay, I could do some little fake music videos in the middle of it, that sounds a little more interesting.' And then somehow, you resist and resist but you're in development hell for so long you eventually kind of come around and go 'Okay, I just want to work.'... We had a guy named Pat Siciliano who was kind of scouting bands for us, then they would send me to see them in their rehearsal spaces. I think I scouted a couple more than what we eventually chose, but I liked the guys that he found for us, and they seemed bright and funny enough for the movie, so we went with them."
    • Errores
      (at around 1h 12 mins) When Lisa pops out the glass jar to battle the alien, her TV camera and hair-clip vanish.
    • Citas

      Peanut: This son of a bitch is crazier than a tree full of owls!

    • Créditos curiosos
      Dollman appears after the end credits.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Dollman contra los juguetes demoníacos (1993)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Demon's Kiss
      Performed by Blue Öyster Cult

      Written by Eric Bloom (as E. Bloom), Donald Roeser (as. D. Roeser), John Shirley (as J. Shirley)

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 11 de mayo de 1994 (Hungría)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Bad Channels
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • Full Moon Entertainment
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 28 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Ultra Stereo
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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