Death Dimension

Death Dimension (also known as Death Dimensions, Freeze Bomb, Icy Death, The Kill Factor, and Black Eliminator) is a 1978 American B-list action thriller and martial arts film by Al Adamson starring Jim Kelly, Harold Sakata, George Lazenby, Terry Moore, and Aldo Ray.

Death Dimension
Theatrical poster for Death Dimension (1978)
Directed byAl Adamson
Produced byGary Graver
Written byHarry Hope
StarringJim Kelly
Harold Sakata
George Lazenby
Music byChuck Ransdell
CinematographyGary Graver
Edited byDan Seeger
Distributed byMovietime
Release date
  • July 1978 (1978-07)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

A rogue scientist, Dr. Mason (T.E. Foreman), who invents a weather control device, is unknowingly being funded by gangster leader nicknamed "The Pig" (Sakata). Upon discovering that the pig plans to use the device for blackmail instead of ending droughts as he had planned, Mason kills himself.

In order to prevent the secrets of the device from falling into the hands of the Pig, shortly before his death the scientist implants assistant Felicia's forehead (Patch Mackenzie) with a microchip containing the plans.

As the Pig is planning on selling the plans to the highest bidder he has her chased by his henchmen.

The local police chief, Capt. Gallagher (Lazenby), gets put on the case and assigns an investigator, martial arts expert Detective Ash (Kelly) to protect Felicia.

Pig's henchmen manage to kill Ash's girlfriend, however, Detective Ash manages to get Felicia to safety after an extended chase sequence.

Production

Advertised as the one movie James Bond would go to see, features many actors with links to the Bond series, including George Lazenby and Harold Sakata/ One of two movies that Adamson directed starring Jim Kelly, the other being Black Samurai

Reception

Creature Feature gave the move one out of five stars, finding the story to be especially weak. [1] Moria gave the movie two stars, noting that the science fiction elements are minimal, the title has little to do with the movie and the movie is more of an action film. It did find that this was one of the best of director's Al Adamson films. [2] Film Critics United found much of the acting lacking and many of the action sequences lackluster, only recommended it for fans of Jim Kelly. [3] Letterbox DVD gave the move 2.8 out of 5 stars. [4]

Home Release

Released on DVD in 2003 [5] Also released as part of a box set of Al Adamson's movies [6]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.