Assault on Precinct 13 [WS] [Blu-ray]
Retail: $19.98
Our Price:
$16.78
Save: $3.20
In Stock - Ships in 24 Hours
-
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen Rating:
R-
Language:
Eng Studio:
ImageUPC:
014381514254Year of Release:
1976Item Number:
IMA005142Release Date:
02/03/2009Genre:
Action –
Action Thriller
Format:
Blu-ray
MOVIE DESCRIPTION:
Cops, secretaries, and prisoners stuck in a soon-to-be-shuttered L.A. police station fight off a horde of murderous gang members in director John Carpenter's homage to Howard Hawks. When police officer Bishop (Austin Stoker) is left in charge of Precinct 13 on the last day it's open, he isn't prepared for the onslaught of a murderous street gang who have come into the possession of an enormous arsenal of guns. Finding himself trapped in the precinct with a pair of secretaries (Laurie Zimmer and Nancy Loomis), a few civilians and a handful of prisoners, Bishop is unable to call for help because the phones have already been disconnected and the precinct is in a run-down, out-of-the-way neighborhood. Holding out for a rescue, he and his fellow prisoners band together to barricade themselves in and hold the bandits at bay. But as the casualties mount and the supplies run low, they must choose between a daring escape attempt, a fiery offensive, or certain death. The sophomore feature from auteur-in-the-making John Carpenter, Assault on Precinct 13 reunited the director with Douglas H. Knapp, his cinematographer on 1974's Dark Star. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
DVD FEATURES:
- Region: ABC
- Number of Discs: 1
- Screen: Color
- Audio: Dolby Digital Mono
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 (Cinemascope)
- Features:
- Interview with director John Carpenter and actor Austin Stoker
- Radio spots
- Still gallery
- Audio commentary by John Carpenter
- Original theatrical trailer
- John Carpenter's isolated score
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Cast:
Austin Stoker - Bishop
Darwin Joston - Wilson
Al Nakauchi - Oriental Warlord
Gil Rankin - Bus Driver
Cliff Battuello - First Bus Guard
Charles Cyphers - Starker
Nancy Loomis - Julie
Kenny Miyamoto - Oriental Tough
Jerry Viramontes - Chicano Hood
Len Whitaker - Black Hood
Kris Young - Gang Member
Warren Bradley III - Gang Member
Joe Woo Jr. - Gang Member
Brent Keast - Radio Announcer
Maynard Smith - Police Commissioner
Alan Koss - Patrolman BaxterDirector:
John CarpenterProducer:
J. Stein Kaplan, Joseph KaufmanScreenwriter:
John CarpenterCinematographer:
Douglas H. KnappComposer (Music Score):
John CarpenterEditor:
John CarpenterArt Director:
Tommy Lee WallaceExecutive Producer:
Joseph KaufmanMakeup:
Don BledsoeSpecial Effects:
Richard AlbainFirst Assistant Director:
James NicholsStunts:
Rueben Joe Melendez, John Roy RogersChoreography:
Douglas Olivares, William WaldmanProduction Manager:
John SyrjamakiStill Photographer:
Rena SmallScript Supervisor:
Debra HillFirst Assistant Editor:
Debra HillProduction Assistant:
Blake SchaeferProperties Master:
Craig StearnsRe-Recording Mixer:
Bill VarneyProduction Assistant:
Randy MooreSound Recordist:
William CooperSecond Assistant Editor:
Curt SchulkeyBoom Operator:
Alan CassidyGaffer:
Jack EnglishPost Production Supervisor:
James NicholsGrip:
Trippy GaffordCostume/Wardrobe:
Louise KyesProduction Assistant:
Marla Miller, Jocelyne StoikovitchKey Grip:
Kurt YoungProduction Assistant:
Tom Hansen
REVIEW:
- Although its production values are a solid step up from the audaciously pieced-together Dark Star, John Carpenter's sophomore features remains another example of the director's ability to do more with less. Lean, frill-free, and focused on action, the film earns constant comparisons to Howard Hawks' Rio Bravo and George Romero's Night of the Living Dead. The differences are as illuminating as the similarities, however, for Assault on Precinct 13 lacks the socially conscious overtones of the Romero film and the tough-guy heroics of the Hawks one. That leaves tight plotting, tight-lipped dialogue, and a beautiful tableaux of breaking windows and bouncing bullets. The cast is supremely functional, for they aren't characters so much as pieces on a chess board, but with a minimum of fuss they embody the coiled fear and languorous boredom of life under intermittent siege -- especially Laurie Zimmer and Nancy Loomis as a pair of police secretaries. Though a few chuckles come during an early sequence in which the world's most annoyingly precious little girl gets her comeuppance, there's little explicit humor to leaven the proceedings. But the legion of B-movie biker villains and the sheer glee with which Carpenter choreographs his mayhem help make Assault on Precinct 13 first and foremost a popular entertainment. Considering that it was filmed for a fraction of what it costs to shoot a high-concept Hollywood action flick 25 years later, this one really should be a film-school staple. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
Assault on Precinct 13 [WS] [Blu-ray] - Available now from DVDPlanet.com, join our mailing list and receive special offers and promotions.






Find us on Facebook
Become an Affiliate