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L'ange de la destruction

Original title: Eve of Destruction
  • 1991
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.0/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Gregory Hines in L'ange de la destruction (1991)
Official Home Video Trailer
Play trailer1:44
2 Videos
33 Photos
ActionFantasySci-FiThriller

A terrorist hunter is hired by a scientist to deactivate her android double, a walking, talking, murderous nuclear bomb which has gone amok in the big city and is about to explode.A terrorist hunter is hired by a scientist to deactivate her android double, a walking, talking, murderous nuclear bomb which has gone amok in the big city and is about to explode.A terrorist hunter is hired by a scientist to deactivate her android double, a walking, talking, murderous nuclear bomb which has gone amok in the big city and is about to explode.

  • Director
    • Duncan Gibbins
  • Writers
    • Duncan Gibbins
    • Yale Udoff
  • Stars
    • Gregory Hines
    • Renée Soutendijk
    • Michael Greene
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.0/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Duncan Gibbins
    • Writers
      • Duncan Gibbins
      • Yale Udoff
    • Stars
      • Gregory Hines
      • Renée Soutendijk
      • Michael Greene
    • 31User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Eve of Destruction
    Trailer 1:44
    Eve of Destruction
    Eve of Destruction [1991]
    Trailer 1:03
    Eve of Destruction [1991]
    Eve of Destruction [1991]
    Trailer 1:03
    Eve of Destruction [1991]

    Photos33

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Gregory Hines
    Gregory Hines
    • Colonel Jim McQuade
    Renée Soutendijk
    Renée Soutendijk
    • Dr. Eve Simmons…
    Michael Greene
    Michael Greene
    • General Curtis
    Kurt Fuller
    Kurt Fuller
    • Bill Schneider
    John M. Jackson
    John M. Jackson
    • Peter Arnold
    Loren Haynes
    Loren Haynes
    • Steve the Robot
    Nelson Mashita
    Nelson Mashita
    • Scientist…
    Alan Haufrect
    Alan Haufrect
    • Dr. Heller
    Maryedith Burrell
    Maryedith Burrell
    • Dawn Perlin
    Norman Merrill
    • First Scientist
    Craig Hensley
    Craig Hensley
    • Young Man on Train
    • (as Craig Oldfather)
    Greg Collins
    Greg Collins
    • Skaaren
    Eddie Matthews
    Eddie Matthews
    • Bank Robber #1
    Tom Morga
    Tom Morga
    • Bank Robber #2
    Tim Russ
    Tim Russ
    • Carter
    Mike Jolly
    • Stevenson
    Ross Malinger
    Ross Malinger
    • Timmy Arnold
    Marga Chavez
    • Elvira
    • Director
      • Duncan Gibbins
    • Writers
      • Duncan Gibbins
      • Yale Udoff
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    5.02.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7GOWBTW

    A time bomb waiting to happen!

    Averting threats are a common way to keep peace in check, but when it comes to a robot with a built-in bomb, there's going to be trouble. For Col. Jim McQuade(Gregory Hines), he's the man. The robot Eve VIII(Renee Soutendjik) has the memories of her creator(also played by her). However, she has the worst temper out of any woman you would cross. When she was with those rowdy guys. There was a bit of humor when she bit one of them on the "love gun". Rule number one, never reveal yourself to a lady robot. You just might get it! I know he won't be having sex for a while, OUCH! It was more painful to watch when she broke the other guy's arm. She was like that when she was going on the brink. She was much more dangerous when she started ticking. The only Achilles' heel on her were her eyes. And Jim had the laser sighted gun to use against her. The subway scene is one I'll never forget. Confronting EVE VIII, seeing the laser sight before her, and the subway train heading towards McQuade. The trains were computer-controlled and Jim's quick thinking always seems to be on his side. This movie has the action, yet it was very subtle. Very watchable though. 2.5 out of 5 stars
    lor_

    Renee Soutendijk pumps up a flawed horror pic

    My review was written in January 1991 after a Times Square screening.

    Intense thesping by Renee Soutendijk in dual roles as "Eve of Destruction" almost lifts this tasteless horror fantasy above the norm. Inconsistent scripting and direction reduce the Orion release to a genre fan special with limited chances at finding a crossover audience.

    That's a shame, because there are germs of interesting ideas in the screenplay by helmer Duncan Gibbins and Yale Udoff, latter the scripter of Nicolas Roeg's intriguing "Bad Timing".

    Pic's basis is that most durable of sci-fi properties, Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein", which ranks second only to Bram Stoker's "Dracula" for inspiring motion pictures. "Eve" is the third recent pic to hark back to James Whale's classic "Bride of Frankenstein" after last year's satire "Frankenhooker" as well as mad scientist Bruce Davison creating a female cyborg in "Steel & Lace".

    Italian bombshell Rosalba Neri played "Lady Frankenstein" in 1971 and created male monsters, but "Eve" goes one logical step further in having Dutch actress Soutendijk as scientist Eve Simmons creating a robot in her own image.

    Effective opening scenes show the robot , Eve III, on a test run in San Francisco being damaged by gunfire during a bank holdup. The man monitoring Eve is killed and the beautiful monster becomes a loose cannon.

    Gung ho Jim McQuade (Gregory Hines), no relation to Orion's "Lone Wolf McQuade" of eight years ago, is called in from his anti-terrorist activities to find Eve and immobilize her with a shot through the eye. What he isn't told is that Eve was created as a robot/bomb with nuclear capability.

    Since Eve is endowed with her creator's memories as well as good looks, the trail to track her down retraces Dr. Eve's childhood traumas and current relationship;s. Film's psuedo-feminist theme is bungled badly: the monster starts living out Simmons' unrealized sexual fantasies only to kill or maim the endless stream of male chauvinist pigs it teses.

    Further, the doctor's unresolved problems with her estranged dad (Kevin McCarthy, in a brief uncredited role), who beat her mother and caused her death, leads to a contrived scene of robot revenge.

    Aiming at the low-end audience, film's nadir is a tasteless scene of sexy Eve picking up a guy in a bar and then biting off his most prized possession in a hot sheets motel room. The audience is spared the visualization of this "Porky's" level horror motif, but the damage to the film's tone is irreversible.

    Running motif of Eve going into her killer molde whenever some guy calls her "bitch!" is the worst sort of pandering to one's assumed target viewer.

    Atmospheric climax of Hines chasing Eve (clutching Simmons' son she takes to be her own) through the Manhattan subway tunnels is clumsily directed by Gibbins with several anti-climaxes and a fake James Bond-style countdown as the activated robot is seconds away from a nuclear explosion (film coincidentally is lensed by Bond cinematographer Alan Hume). Much is made of the boy' safety during this sequence, but pic foolishly ignores him completely once the danger is over.

    Soutendijk, a versatile thesp who has followed her Dutch triumphs like "Spetters" with several U. S. telefilms and two American features released by Shapiro Glickenhaus, brings utter conviction to both roles to carry the picture.

    Hines, no stranger to action roles in "Wolfen" and "Off Limits". Still seems out of place espousing Oliver North-style rhetoric in playing a shoot first, ask questions later hero. Supporting cast is weak in what plays like a 2-1/2 hander.. Makeup effects are satisfying, notably Soutendijk's more than nude scenes as she peels away body tissue to make self-repairs on her robot body. French ace Philippe Sarde contributes an effecitve musical score.
    6gridoon

    Routine....until the exciting climax.

    A peculiar story of a woman scientist trying to track down (with the help of a tough army colonel) a female robot with nuclear powers, who not only looks like her but also shares her thoughts and memories. The gimmick is that the robot has no inhibitions, and acts out the woman's darkest sexual and violent fantasies, until "it" gets completely out of control. The story provides plenty of opportunities for male-bashing (it seems that almost every man that the robot meets is a chauvinistic pig), and the film doesn't miss any of them. But if you're patient, you'll be rewarded; the climactic sequence in the New York subway is excitingly staged and delivers the goods. And Renee Soutendijk is utterly convincing in both her roles. (**1/2)
    uds3

    You're gonna need more than flowers and sweet talk to win this one over!

    Awesomely underwhelming tale of a scientist who designs a female robot, half WESTWORLD half TERMINATOR, modelled on her own personality, emotions and thought-processes.

    Sometime Dutch actress Renee Soutendijk, whom one might unkindly describe as Lee Remick's less attractive sister (on a good day) has her hands full when EVE turns feral and runs amok. Gregory Hines, hopelessly miscast in his role as a Wesley Snipes PASSENGER 57 type operative, heads up the chase to defuse Eve with Ms Soutendijk's somewhat reluctant help.

    Looking rather dated these days, especially by 90's standards, the film gets nowehere at a remarkably slow pace leading up to the subway climax which at least heralds the end of the movie!

    Yawn.....next please?
    6perkypops

    A good sci-fi B Movie

    The premise of this film is how robots, complete with comprehensive copies of human minds and with immense strength, power and armament, may deal with the darker parts of their copied brain. Renée Soutendijk gets to play both the human creator, Dr Eve, and her robot copy named Eve VIII, and pretty juicy parts they are to play too, poles apart, and every good actors dream role. And a pretty good job she does too, never too overplayed, never too crude, just subtle.

    When Eve VIII escapes and appears to go on to blood letting of extreme proportions we are treated to some insight into the darker parts of Dr Eve's mind, at first to titillate and then to hunt the errant robot down. And it is not badly done either. Okay some of the dialogue may be a little comical or flawed at times, but the underlying tale is always watchable and that is what films are supposed to be. Tension is ratcheted up nicely throughout, and the ending is almost as good as one would expect from this kind of B movie genre. It certainly puts to shame many much more hyped up pieces of the sci-fi genre around on the circuits these days.

    Worth a watch and six out of ten.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Duncan Gibbins tragically died in a fire in November 1993, aged just 41. This was his second and final feature film.
    • Goofs
      The steering wheel airbag that deploys in the BMW remains completely inflated after deployment, interfering with the driver's ability to steer. Air bags begin to deflate through built-in openings within 1/10th of a second or less after deployment, as they are designed to cushion an impact by decelerating a head and torso.
    • Quotes

      Colonel Jim McQuade: Well this is quite some toy you have yourselves here gentlemen. I suppose you want me to put it back in its box.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Entertainment Tonight: Episode dated 23 January 1991 (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      ACAPULCO
      Written by David Snell

      Published by Bruton Music / APM Music (ASCAP)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 18, 1991 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Eve of Destruction
    • Filming locations
      • San Francisco, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Nelson Entertainment
      • Interscope Communications
      • Nelson Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $13,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,451,119
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,163,024
      • Jan 21, 1991
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,451,119
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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