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Heros Boys

Original title: The Zero Boys
  • 1986
  • 12
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
3K
YOUR RATING
Heros Boys (1986)
A group of friends travel to a wilderness area to play a survival game. Soon they unexpectedly find themselves in a real-life survival situation.
Play trailer3:10
1 Video
78 Photos
ActionHorrorThriller

A group of friends travel to a wilderness area to play a survival game. Soon they unexpectedly find themselves in a real-life survival situation.A group of friends travel to a wilderness area to play a survival game. Soon they unexpectedly find themselves in a real-life survival situation.A group of friends travel to a wilderness area to play a survival game. Soon they unexpectedly find themselves in a real-life survival situation.

  • Director
    • Nico Mastorakis
  • Writers
    • Robert Gilliam
    • Nico Mastorakis
    • Fred Perry
  • Stars
    • Daniel Hirsch
    • Kelli Maroney
    • Nicole Rio
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nico Mastorakis
    • Writers
      • Robert Gilliam
      • Nico Mastorakis
      • Fred Perry
    • Stars
      • Daniel Hirsch
      • Kelli Maroney
      • Nicole Rio
    • 38User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:10
    Trailer

    Photos78

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    + 73
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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Daniel Hirsch
    Daniel Hirsch
    • Steve
    Kelli Maroney
    Kelli Maroney
    • Jamie
    Nicole Rio
    Nicole Rio
    • Sue
    Tom Shell
    Tom Shell
    • Larry
    Jared Moses
    Jared Moses
    • Rip
    Crystal Carson
    Crystal Carson
    • Trish
    Joe Estevez
    Joe Estevez
    • Killer
    • (as Joe Phelan)
    Gary Jochimsen
    • Killer #2
    John Michaels
    John Michaels
    • Casey
    Elise Turner
    • Victim
    T.K. Webb
    • Killer #3
    Jason Ricketts
    • Soldier #1
    Stephen Kay
    Stephen Kay
    • Soldier #2
    • (as Stephen T. Kay)
    Neil Weiss
    • Soldier #3
    Harry Donenfeld
    Harry Donenfeld
    • Snake Man
    Dennis Ott
    • Soldier #4
    Patrick Hirsch
    • Soldier #5
    Trudy Adams
    • Secretary
    • Director
      • Nico Mastorakis
    • Writers
      • Robert Gilliam
      • Nico Mastorakis
      • Fred Perry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    5.22.9K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    6Philbs13

    Guns, woods and college students

    Wrong Turn is definitely a ripoff the general idea in this movie, only that movie is a serious horror film and this one is more of the standard B- horror with a twist of humorous adventure. It's labeled a horror film, which by all comparable standards to 80s horror films it is, but you're not entirely sure where the movie is going in the first 15 minutes. The box art and opening sequence both set this up to be more of a light weight version of Deliverence mixed with some B- soldier heavy artillary jungle warfare. What you actually get is a paint ball battle in a deserted town, followed by a random weekend in the woods that goes awry. For the first 30 minutes, nothing particularly horrific happens, then the rest of the movie is a lot of running through the woods survival. It's blatantly obvious by both the cast and the box art that this film is total B- territory and I obviously only recommend it for fans of these films. I just wish that the energy from the opening sequence was carried through the entire film. There's some definite cult status here, but the second half of the film strays too far into cliché horror territory that you forget the initial premise from the opening. Unfortunately there is also NO ending to this film.

    Aside from the short-comings, I have a lot of respect for Nico Mastorakis as a director, writer and producer. He's one of the rare few that doesn't conform to the BS that is Hollywood. I'm also glad that there are some great featurettes on his DVDs on the making of his movies including his commentary as well.
    Backlash007

    "It wasn't me, it was JASON!"

    The Zero Boys is a good, old fashioned 80's action/horror/comedy. It's also rare. I just found this one on DVD (if you believe that) and it's marketed as an action movie; the trailer, the cover art, everything. It does start out that way. The Zero Boys, Steve, Larry, and Rip, are the best at what they do: paintball wars. The movie starts with a great game of paintball. When the Zero Boys win, they take a vacation in the woods and stumble upon an abandoned cabin. That's when the horror starts. The action part is so good that I almost didn't want it to turn into a horror flick. It all works out though because the horror is just as good, and cheesy, as the action. It's actually turns into a decent slasher flick which creates an eerie atmosphere. The cheesy dialogue and the one liners are what really make the movie. Such phrases as "Jason old boy, are you in there?" and "Probably just a bunch of faggots living in the woods." make this one a classic. All through the movie I kept remarking about how much the lead killer looked like Martin Sheen. It turned out to be his brother, Joe Estevez. If you're looking for an entertaining mix of genres, catch The Zero Boys, if you can find it.
    6Hey_Sweden

    Passable thrills for 1980s horror completists.

    The title characters are three young men - Steve (Daniel Hirsch), Larry (Tom Shell), and Rip (Jared Moses) - who are veterans of weekend war games. They head out with three female companions - Jamie (Kelli Maroney), Sue (Nicole Rio), and Trish (Crystal Carson) - into the woods to have a good time. They come across an isolated dwelling, and decide to make themselves at home. They do this at their own peril, for the house owner and an associate are evil sadists and not exactly hospitable.

    Some genre buffs cite this as a forerunner to more modern "torture porn" features like the "Saw" and "Hostel" series, except that it's a lot less explicit in terms of onscreen human suffering. Overall, it's a mildly entertaining thriller, with tones of a slasher at times but which also takes its cue from survival films like "Deliverance". It might not be gory or sexy enough to suit some tastes, but the story is pretty simple and straightforward, and the pacing is more than adequate. The characters, especially Rip, threaten to be overly annoying at first, but become easier to root for as the story progresses. Filmed on the same basic locations as "Friday the 13th Part III", this can boast an early credit for future big time composer Hans Zimmer ("Inception", "The Dark Knight"). Atmosphere is decent, and while the script is often predictable, it does elicit some chuckles from this viewer when it plays out just as he thought it would.

    The acting is negligible, although to be fair the actors have to mouth a fair amount of inane dialogue. Maroney is the most recognizable of the young cast; viewers familiar with this cute, appealing actress from "Night of the Comet" and "Chopping Mall" will be amused when she's presented with a gun and tells Steve that she doesn't know how to use one. The audience will be struck by the resemblance of the primary antagonist to actor Martin Sheen (you get an ever so slight echo of "Apocalypse Now" here), so it comes as no surprise that the actor in question is Joe Estevez, Martins' brother! (Acting under a pseudonym.)

    Running a reasonably trim hour and a half, this is watchable enough to not feel like a waste of time.

    Six out of 10.
    7amandagellar-31077

    Enjoyable and Different Semi-Slasher

    The Zero Boys is definitely a strange one. While it looks like a Rambo rip off or some sort of survivalist action movie, it really has a structure and cast more in line with the slasher movies of that same area.

    A bunch of paintball loving guys and their girlfriends head up to a secluded cabin in the woods (which they don't own). Soon, someone is killing them one by one due to their tresspassing.

    There are shades of the torture film when they discover that these killers have been recording their victims' final moments on video and playing them to taunt their current victims. Also, scream queen Kelli Maroney (Chopping Mall, Night of the Comet) is always a welcome addition to any film's cast and the film clips along at a great, exciting pace. It's a shame this one is lesser known that some of its contemporaries.
    4rooee

    80s horror/action mashup that fails to Deliver(ance)

    The Zero Boys are the best "Weekend Warriors" on the paintball ranch. With feisty newcomer Jamie (Kelli Maroney) in tow, the gang heads out on a classic aimless teen road trip, and wind up at an apparently deserted country house where they proceed to do the things horror teens do: have sex, play games, argue, and split up to maximise their vulnerability.

    Of course, they are not alone. The yokel hicks are on the loose with knives, and they soon lure the group into the woods – and into a series of traps. The Zero Boys (and Girls) must use their dubious survival skills, and their stash of real guns, to fight back and make it through the night.

    Although Nico Mastorakis is an uber-trash auteur on the level of Albert Pyun, the first scene is promising: playful in the same way that Vamp toyed with our perceptions in its opening. And the idea of the kids taking the front foot, rather than being out-and-out victims, is an intriguing setup. But it's a swift descent into mediocrity and cliché.

    "Eat your heart out, Sly," one gun-toting character utters. The film has no problem referencing its contemporaries, including Friday the 13th and The Twilight Zone. It's kinda meta. Ostensibly The Zero Boys is a blend of two classic 80s genres: the teen slasher and the uzi action movie. If only it delivered on the scares or the thrills. In its found footage torture vignettes and its Hunger Games survive-'em-up finale it even prefigures certain modern genres, but in practice we have the usual idiot-plotting schlock, with characters inexplicably going off and doing their own thing to suit audience expectations rather than logic.

    Kelli Maroney is perhaps most contemporaneously famous for Night of the Comet, another (much better) mid-80s genre mashup. She's different here: less ditzy and more resourceful, and usually the smartest person in the room. She's more than a match for our hero, Steve, played by Daniel Hirsch with the soft-spoken intensity of a young Bruce Dern but without the charisma.

    The positives: occasionally decent quickfire dialogue; some good 'n' gaudy lighting; the pacing is bang on; and Hans Zimmer's Gothic- synth score is fantastic. What it lacks is the ghoulish humour and gore to match something like Tobe Hooper's The Texas Chain Saw Massacre 2 or Sam Raimi's Evil Dead series. Poor editing and mediocre makeup undermine the best scares (don't open that freezer cabinet!). Throw in some irrelevant slow motion and a frankly meaningless final shot and we're left with a distinctly ordinary entry in the 80s slasher canon.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Action
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Filmed on the same locations and sets as Meurtres en 3 dimensions (1982) .
    • Goofs
      At 51:52 the sound of automatic gunfire starts well before the Boys visibly fire their Uzis.
    • Quotes

      Jamie: I'm nineteen, I was born in Minnesota and I'm in my sophomore year at the university. I'm a straight-A psych major with a minor in speech pathology and one in English. I'm 5'6" love tennis, and I fuck on the first date.

    • Alternate versions
      The swedish filmcensor department actually cut the entire end of this production, ending the film with the scene where Steve & Jamie gets into the tree-trap.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Third Annual 'On Cinema' Oscar Special (2015)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 3, 1986 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Escuadrón salvaje
    • Filming locations
      • Newhall Ranch - Rt. 126, Valencia, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Omega Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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