Dead Heat (1988 film)

Dead Heat (released in the Philippines as Iron Cops[2]) is a 1988 American buddy cop action zombie comedy film directed by Mark Goldblatt and starring Treat Williams and Joe Piscopo.[3] The film is about an LAPD police officer who is murdered while attempting to arrest zombies who have been reanimated by the head of Dante Laboratories in order to carry out violent armed robberies, and decides to get revenge with the help of his former partner.

Dead Heat
Film poster
Directed byMark Goldblatt
Produced by
  • David Helpern
  • Michael L. Meltzer[1]
Written byTerry Black[1]
Starring
Music byErnest Troost
CinematographyRobert D. Yeoman[1]
Edited byHarvey Rosenstock[1]
Production
company
Helpern/Meltzer[1]
Distributed byNew World Pictures
Release date
  • May 6, 1988 (1988-05-06)
Running time
86 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States[1]
LanguageEnglish
Box office$3,588,626

Plot

Detectives Roger Mortis and Doug Bigelow are called to the scene of a rather violent jewelry store robbery. The robbers take on a squadron of police in a messy shootout, but neither seem affected when they are riddled with bullets. Thanks to the combined, albeit extreme measures of Mortis and Bigelow, they are able to take out the criminals, their acts narrowly avoiding termination. Meanwhile, a coroner friend of Roger's, Rebecca informs the detectives that the two bodies they had brought in had previously been to the morgue: not only do they have autopsy scars, but she herself clearly remembers performing the autopsy and has pictures to prove it, suggesting they simply got up and left the morgue of their own volition.

There is a preservative chemical compound found in the bodies that connect the pair of detectives to a company that had ordered a great amount of it recently. Mortis and Bigelow investigate and meet the company's head public relations person, Randi James who gives them a tour of the facility. When Doug wanders off to investigate a suspicious room, he encounters the reanimated corpse of a biker on a strange machine and in the fray, Roger is knocked into a decompression room used to humanely kill failed test animals and is asphyxiated to death.

Encountering the machine, and realizing it is capable of bringing people back from the dead, Rebecca and Doug successfully bring Roger back from the dead. He says he feels fine, yet he has no heart beat and his skin is cold to the touch, Rebecca surmises he has about twelve hours before the reanimation process ends and he dissolves into a puddle of mush. Roger decides to take this time to find and exact his vengeance on the person who killed him. They go to Randi's house just shortly before she is attacked by two more undead thugs, which the partners are able to subdue. Randi says that she is the daughter of a rich industrialist, and the owner of the company she works for until his death, Arthur P. Laudermilk.

The two of them pay another visit to Rebecca, who says that she might have found a way to keep Roger in healthy condition indefinitely, but the unsure nature of the theory has him decide to spend his final hours finding the man who killed him. He and Randi pay a visit to Laudermilk's tomb and Randi admits she's not his daughter, more a protégé or daughter he'd never had. While there, they encounter a numeric code, which Roger discovers later is a vital clue. Upon returning to Randi's home, they find Doug dead, having been suspended and drowned in a fish tank for some time. Randi tells Roger that she too is undead, having been one of Laudermilk's first test subjects for resurrection, shortly before abruptly dissolving while asking for Roger's forgiveness.

Roger confronts the head coroner Dr. Ernest McNab who was indicated by the secret numeric code that Roger had found, but he turns the tables on Roger, capturing him, then locking him in an ambulance with Rebecca's dead body in order to wait out his last hour to dissolution. He releases the brakes on the ambulance and puts it in neutral, sending it careening down the highway into a massive collision, from which he emerges, even more zombified and scarred almost beyond recognition. He returns to the hospital where McNab and a resurrected Laudermilk are pitching the resurrection machine to a group of very rich clients. Mortis breaks in and the ensuing crossfire between him and McNab's men kill off most of the rich clients, leaving Laudermilk cowering in a corner.

McNab reveals a test subject; Doug, resurrected from the machine. But because he's been dead for hours, the brain deterioration leaves him little more than an obedient zombie with no memory of who Roger is. Before he can obey McNab's orders to kill Mortis, however, Roger manages to trigger Doug's short-term memory and bring him back to normal. The pair go after McNab who immediately kills himself before they can do anything. Roger and Doug put McNab onto the resurrection table and resurrect him, but Doug starts the resurrection process again and it overloads, causing a screaming McNab to explode in the machine. Despite Laudermilk's pleas and promises of eternal life, the pair then destroy the machine completely, leaving the room pondering about the afterlife and reincarnation; Doug's fond wish of being reincarnated as a girl's bicycle seat intriguing the both of them. Roger says finally, "This could be the end of a beautiful friendship."

Cast

Production

According to The Hollywood Reporter's chart from 1 September 1987, principal photography began on Dead Heat on 19 August 1987 in Southern California.[1] The Los Angeles Times mentioned Darren Starr as a writer on the film along with Terry Black. The films credits only list Black as the screenwriter.[1]

Release

Dead Heat opened in Los Angeles and New York on May 6, 1988.[1] In the Philippines, the film was released as Iron Cops on November 10, 1988.[2]

Reception

Dead Heat received negative reviews from The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times.[4][5]

See also

References

  1. "Dead Heat". American Film Institute. Retrieved July 17, 2019.
  2. "Grand Opening Today". Manila Standard. Manila Standard News, Inc. November 10, 1988. p. 26. Retrieved June 19, 2020. You can't keep a good cop dead
  3. Binion, Cavett. "Dead Heat". AllMovie. Retrieved July 17, 2019.
  4. Michael Wilmington (May 9, 1988). "MOVIE REVIEW : Good Idea Dies Making It to Screen in 'Heat' - Los Angeles Times". Articles.latimes.com. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  5. Walter Goodman (May 7, 1988). "Dead Heat (1988) FILM; Crooks Die Hard But So Does Cop". The New York Times.
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