Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA New York City career woman becomes a vigilante after being raped by two car thieves.A New York City career woman becomes a vigilante after being raped by two car thieves.A New York City career woman becomes a vigilante after being raped by two car thieves.
Timothy Roselle
- Gun Salesman
- (as Tim Roselle)
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The descriptions of writer / director Sig Shore's harsh, exploitative revenge outing "Sudden Death" being the female version of "Death Wish" and especially "Death Wish 2" is pretty accurate, but in the way it doesn't make it any better. I was somewhat disappointed in this one. I didn't find it to be all that powerful and edgy in conveying the character's torment and the attack scenes less effective because of the protagonist's careless actions of the situations she puts herself into and its choice of music throughout was off putting. Other than the first demoralizing opening attack on the protagonist that transforms her, the rest (involving our victim searching for payback on her attackers, but stumbling across other thugs) felt silly and made the sequences rather cheesy in the execution. Especially the use of slow-motion, but definitely the tacky soundtrack choices. The exercise at times feels unwieldy, but what is has going for it is the use of actual New York locations giving the dreary atmosphere some dirt and grit. It's a grungy look that works. However its grim nature seems to lose out when its came down to the final chase sequence that falls into a generic climatic action cliff-hanger. The performances are one-note. Denise Coward holds her own, but I didn't find her character to be all that well written and there was real disconnect there. The predictable plot is very run-of- the-mill and the unconvincing cop (A brooding Frank Runyeon)/ victim relationship felt like nothing more than filler to the overall picture. It's somewhat unfocused, but it didn't pretend to be anything else then what it set out to be and nor did it shy away from its ugly side.
A tale from the vile city about rape & revenge. The gorgeous Denise Coward gets brutally raped by two crazed criminals in a stolen taxi. She barely survives. With the police investigation slacking, she decides to go after the criminals herself in true Charles Bronson style. Instead of finding them, she encounters several more sleazeballs that try to rape her. So she blows all of their guts out in slow-motion with dumdum bullets. Then goes home each time, satisfied and relaxing with a mixed Martini on the rocks. Halfway the movie something strange happens with the plot. She shows remorse, throws away her gun, thereby ending her killing spree. But the plot picks up with a police officer, her love-interest (yes, sex scene!), being on the trail of the two initial rapists. Beautiful Denise decides to tag along and brings with her... a shotgun. All this on the tunes of a groovy '80s electronic soundtrack, as if Herbie Hancock was goofing around with a cheap Casio keyboard.
My review was written in September 1985 after watching the movie at a Midtown Manhattan screening room.
"Sudden Death" is an unimpressive thriller likely to get okay playoff on the action circuit by virtue of its femme vigilante theme. Filmmaker Sig Shore (best-known as producer of the WB hit "Superfly") has put together commercial elements, but directed them flatly.
Denise Coward (a former Miss Australia beauty contest winner), toplines as Valarie Wells, a New York City rape victim who buys a gun, and not unlike the Charles Bronson in "Death Wish" archetype, starts hanging around in sleazy locations. Sure enough, other men try to assault her with fatal results.
Her businessman boyfriend Herbert (Robert Trumbull) is patronizing, thereby alienating her affections which are transferred to the cop on the case. Det. Lowery (Frank Runyeon). Quite improbably, when Lowery discovers she is what the press had dubbed The Dum-Dum Killer (after the lethal bullets she uses), he jumps in bed with her and later successfully covers up her guilt when closing both cases.
Low-budgeter suffers from a paucity of action, with a lengthy final reel foot chase by Lowery after the rapist that is thoroughly unexciting. Coward is a looker, but her impassive, expressionless acting wins little audience sympathy. Runyeon, a tv soap opera star, looks uncomfortable in action scenes.
Though advertised as "the first female vigilante", pic actually suffers by comparison to its more stylish forerunners, "Ms. 45" and "Alley Cat". Tech credits are okay, with an emphasis on exploding blood packs in the various victims.
"Sudden Death" is an unimpressive thriller likely to get okay playoff on the action circuit by virtue of its femme vigilante theme. Filmmaker Sig Shore (best-known as producer of the WB hit "Superfly") has put together commercial elements, but directed them flatly.
Denise Coward (a former Miss Australia beauty contest winner), toplines as Valarie Wells, a New York City rape victim who buys a gun, and not unlike the Charles Bronson in "Death Wish" archetype, starts hanging around in sleazy locations. Sure enough, other men try to assault her with fatal results.
Her businessman boyfriend Herbert (Robert Trumbull) is patronizing, thereby alienating her affections which are transferred to the cop on the case. Det. Lowery (Frank Runyeon). Quite improbably, when Lowery discovers she is what the press had dubbed The Dum-Dum Killer (after the lethal bullets she uses), he jumps in bed with her and later successfully covers up her guilt when closing both cases.
Low-budgeter suffers from a paucity of action, with a lengthy final reel foot chase by Lowery after the rapist that is thoroughly unexciting. Coward is a looker, but her impassive, expressionless acting wins little audience sympathy. Runyeon, a tv soap opera star, looks uncomfortable in action scenes.
Though advertised as "the first female vigilante", pic actually suffers by comparison to its more stylish forerunners, "Ms. 45" and "Alley Cat". Tech credits are okay, with an emphasis on exploding blood packs in the various victims.
The film is full of sex and violence and reinforces what George Gerbner and his associates at the University of Pennsylvania claim about fictionalized TV and film violence leading us into a "Mean World Syndrome" perception of reality. New York City comes off looking pretty terrible and the males who inhabit it even worse. They are all thugs and sex-starved beasts who live only to drink and attack women. It's not a pretty place to be. The plot is a mirror image of the Bronson "Death Wish" films, but with a female vigilante who goes out to exact revenge on her rapist attackers. It also parallels "Sudden Impact" very strongly. Hence the title "Sudden Death." Poor acting and uninspired editing, but the film accomplishes its mission: to make us angry and retaliatory and vindictive. It is full of action and punks whom we are happy to see extinguished. Recommended to those who love vigilante movies and can suspend disbelief in many instances during this 90 minute get-even flick.
I know that this is an old and campy movie, but the message as a whole rings true even today...if someone gets raped, they want revenge and boy is it sweet when you get it. Look at Sally Fields in "An Eye for an Eye" ----You want it, You get it, You love it!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring the opening credits, the name of actress Rebecca Hollen, who played Peggy, is spelled as "Rebeccah Hollen''.
- GaffesWells the main female in character goes into a gun shop to by the gun, there is only one problem with this. Even in the 1980s, ballistics was still a accepted science and would have been used to link a gun to the multiple murders in the film, and she bought if from a gun shop, were not only could the gun shop owner recognize her, but could certainly link the gun to her. She is supposed to be a female vigilante, and she should have been smarter then this. She should have bought it from a illegal gun dealer were they would have wiped the serial numbers, making the gun a ghost gun. This makes very little sense, and is a plot hole.
- Citations
Valarie Wells: You know where Hell's Kitchen is?
Maniacal Cab Driver: Yeah. Where in Hell's Kitchen?
Valarie Wells: I don't know. Just drive around. I'll tell you where I wanna get out.
Maniacal Cab Driver: We'll start at 42nd Street West 80th Avenue.
Valarie Wells: Okay.
Maniacal Cab Driver: [giggles] That's where a lot of HOES like to hang out.
Valarie Wells: Is that so?
Maniacal Cab Driver: Yeah. You lookin' for a spot... for yourself?
- Générique farfeluDuring the opening credits, the name of actress Rebecca Hollen, who played Peggy, is spelled as "Rebeccah Hollen''.
- Autres versionsThe UK Vestron video (released as "Dirty Harriet") was cut by 2 mins 32 secs by the BBFC with heavy edits to rape scenes, a woman being choked, and a man slashing a woman's shoulder with a razor.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Remote Control (1988)
- Bandes originalesSudden Death
Performed by Bloodlines
Courtesy of Streetwise Records
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Dirty Harriet - Allein gegen Gewalt und Verbrechen
- Lieux de tournage
- Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(location: Lower Manhattan)
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 603 000 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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