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Cop Killers

  • 1977
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
344
YOUR RATING
Cop Killers (1977)
ActionDrama

Two hippies on their way to a cocaine deal get stopped by the police at a roadblock, resulting in a shootout where they kill the cops. They then go on a crime spree of robbery and murder.Two hippies on their way to a cocaine deal get stopped by the police at a roadblock, resulting in a shootout where they kill the cops. They then go on a crime spree of robbery and murder.Two hippies on their way to a cocaine deal get stopped by the police at a roadblock, resulting in a shootout where they kill the cops. They then go on a crime spree of robbery and murder.

  • Director
    • Walter R. Cichy
  • Writers
    • Walter R. Cichy
    • Howard Ziehm
    • Bill Osco
  • Stars
    • Jason Williams
    • Bill Osco
    • Diane Keller
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    344
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter R. Cichy
    • Writers
      • Walter R. Cichy
      • Howard Ziehm
      • Bill Osco
    • Stars
      • Jason Williams
      • Bill Osco
      • Diane Keller
    • 17User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos70

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Jason Williams
    Jason Williams
    • Ray
    Bill Osco
    • Alex
    Diane Keller
    • Karen
    Michael D. White
    • Collins
    Donna Stubbert
    • Lena
    Judy Ross
    • Becky
    James Nite
    • Ice Cream Man
    Ted Ellison
    • Motorcycle Policeman
    Larry Langela
    • Gas Station Attendant
    Steven Kenner
    • Boyfriend
    Charles Kendrick
    • Liquor Store Owner
    Thomas Burnes
    • Customer
    Jim Ferguson
    • Trooper
    Janice Z. Harrison
    • Ice Cream Girl
    Sue Livack
    • Ice Cream Girl
    Steve 'Bunker' de France
    • Policeman
    • (as Steven deFrance)
    Neil Summers
    Neil Summers
    • Policeman
    Neil Pearce
    • Policeman
    • Director
      • Walter R. Cichy
    • Writers
      • Walter R. Cichy
      • Howard Ziehm
      • Bill Osco
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    5.4344
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    10

    Featured reviews

    10loren-knapp

    I am in this film!

    I am in this movie and for 36 years didn't even know it was ever released. I'm the lead cop in the final scene with the shot gun that guns the bad guys down during the exciting climax. I have posted it on Youtube. We spent the whole day up in Kearney, AZ filming that last sequence. The producer gave the car to an old man who came along catching rattlesnakes. I remember waiting while they went into town to get some kind of brains at Safeway to put under the girls skull cap in order to get the right effect when they shot her in the head. My family was quite surprised to see me in the film as they didn't know anything about it. Yes, the movie is bad, but in a good way. You can see the microphone cords running under the bad guy's shirt in many scenes. In one shot one of the sound guys can be seen in the back seat of the car. The director wasn't big on re-doing scenes. The movie was shot in 16mm and then transfered to 35mm. It cost $50,000 to make of which I was paid $100. What a hoot! I'm giving it a 10 cause I'm in it!
    7recluse2

    Went down smooth

    Movie flowed smoothly along and held your attention to the screen. Action at a high level, characters interesting enough, a basic kind of story you can relate to (Get away! Get the mess over with, get the money). There is one fully degenerate character and another partly-degenerate character. A girl/hostage is along for the ride (not a very impressive actress). Outdoor scenery is a plus. And you meet this hippie cat who lives out in the middle of nowhere in a tapestry cocoon w/ 2 spaced-out hippie chicks. He's a pretty cool cat. There's enough shooting in this film to keep you happy.
    6ofumalow

    Down and dirty little drive-in meller

    I'd never heard of this film, but happened to be reading "Flesh Gordon" star Jason Williams' memoir (meh) and noticed that he had made this film during the same era. It was actually shot well before "Flesh" got released in 1974, but just as that movie was delayed a long time by budgetary/special effects issues, this one was delayed even longer--several years, even--due to disputes between business partners. When it finally did get a theatrical release, it was minuscule, just a a couple Texas drive-ins or something.

    Anyway, among all the mostly boring rural car (or motorcycle) chase movies released to grindhouses and drive-ins in the 1970s, this is above-average, despite being a dirt-cheap production. It's just a pretty tight thriller that commits immediately to being nasty-our longhaired (anti)heroes pick up a load of cocaine dropped by helicopter in the desert, and very soon face a phalanx of police cars. It turns out one of the guys (Williams' character Ray) is a full-on remorseless psycho who has no hesitation in blowing all the lawmen away. This somehow comes as a surprise to his partner/BFF Alex played by Bill Osco, who was a producer on "Flesh" and many other exploitation movies. Nonetheless the duo stick together, determined to reach their designated buyer and collect a big payout.

    The problem isn't just that now presumably every law officer within 200 hundred miles is looking for them, necessitating frequent changes of cars. The problem is also that in acquiring those cars, plus committing a few robberies en route, they gain the attention of various unlucky witnesses whom Ray is all too happy to terminate. This doesn't sit well with Alex, particularly once they gain a hostage in the form of Karen (Diane Keller). She is understandably terrified-both she and Alex soon realize that Ray has no intention of letting her live, even if their mission is otherwise accomplished. And they do get pretty damn close to accomplishing that mission, with things really sparking in the last lap when the trio meet up with another threesome: The very droll coke buyer (Michael D. Collins) and his two stoned-AF hippie-chick mammas (Donna Stubbert, Judy Ross).

    This seems to have been the sole movie for several performers here-apparently the production recruited from southwestern theater groups on location. Those last three named are very entertaining, though god only knows if they were inspired actors or just "playing themselves" through a thick pot haze. The handsome, all-American-surfer-looking Williams is good playing against type as a vicious bully; Osco and Keller are okay.

    Still, a general lack of professional-grade polish to the cast and filmmaking actually works in the movie's favor, lending it a certain effectively sleazy edginess reminiscent of other low-budget wonders like "The Sadist." The grungy backroads atmosphere and fairly tight pacing (though yes we're still talking a circa 1973 sense of editorial pace) punch things across, even if the staging of violence and action sequences is adequate rather than especially vivid or stylish. There's a certain nihilism to it that is compelling-without being pretentious about it, the movie makes no bones about the fact that no one here is likely to make it out alive.
    aliandweb

    Hippy exploitation film provides unintentional laughs.

    A drug deal goes disastrously wrong for two long hairs when they run into cops at a roadblock. They kill the pigs and go on an orgy of kidnap and killing. Particular highlights include the theft of an ice cream truck complete with its camp, whining driver and a hippy hangout in the desert peopled with stoned hippy chicks and a pretentious hippy drug dealer. This is a film obviously inspired by the likes of 'Easy River' and 'Electra Glide in Blue', but it has a very amateur improvised feel to it, especially the dialogue which is a real hoot of late sixties cliches. The names of the cast and crew are the same which gives it all a 'lets do the movie right here' feeling. Howard Ziehm was one of the producers and Rick Baker did the gory gunshot make up.
    sbabin1

    Fun in an Ice Cream truck.

    Read it, read the book. Start from where it says, he plunged his.... A classic movie in every sense of the word. Whats not to like about this flick. Lots of booze, drugs and babes, all in an ice cream truck to boot! My only regret is that I don't own my own copy.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film came about because Flesh Gordon (1974) had been confiscated in a police bust. Walter R. Cichy, associate producer of "Flesh Gordon", needed money in the meantime because of the delay of the film, so he enlisted its star Jason Williams to make an R-rated gritty action film.
    • Goofs
      A crew member can be clearly seen in the back seat of a car holding the boom microphone.
    • Quotes

      Ray: See that man! That's fuckin' pigs blood. If I was scared it would have been my blood!

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 5, 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Copkillers
    • Filming locations
      • Kearny, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Last Chance Productions (II)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $50,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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