User Reviews (4)

Add a Review

  • I was in another office at work a few weeks back, when I was engaged in conversation about the "film" Terror In Beverly Hills. The guy I was speaking with just happened to have a VCR tape of this at his desk. I could not resist. Took it home, popped it in, and although you could tell they did not have much of a budget, they made it work with what they had.

    The film starts in a holding cell of prisoners awaiting transfer to prison. Stallone plays a bad ass white power guy, with standard tattoos and bad attitude. During the transfer, an escape attempt leads to an accident, with several prisoners on the run together. They manage to take a vacationing family hostage, and that is where the head games begin.

    I found the most entertaining part was when the prisoners took the clothing of the father hostage, and Stallone is walking around a store with a Harvard sweatshirt on. If you see the movie, you will appreciate that.

    The movie contains too much profanity to count. More of the F bomb than Scarface.I was planning on watching it again to get an accurate count, but I had to return it. I don't recall any nudity, but plenty of violence. This one is not for kids. Overall, a 5 out of 10. And if you get a chance, check out my review of Terror In Beverly Hills. Not too many postings on that one. I was getting lonely.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I was at my local DVD/video shop today and i have never heard of this movie before but the video case looked good so i hired it.And when i got home i looked up this movie on this web site and i saw the really carp rating of 3.8 and then i watched this movie and it is not a bloody 3.8 out of 10 it is a 6 of 10.

    There are a lot of great action scenes in this movie like when one of the convicts starts to shoot some people in a shop and the scenes in the end of the movie when the family escapes and makes all of those cool booby traps.

    Over all this movie was good and do not believe the crap 3.8 out of 10 rating for this movie.And my rating for this movie is 6 of 10.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Some Spoilers! As a video completest, I was drawn to this film because it stars Zoe Trilling--credited as Geri Betzler here--before she Anglicized her name. She has little to do in this movie but I was still entertained.

    The plot centers on two Vietnam vets, one who is able to let the past go and another who can't. Cliff DeYoung stars as a father, and war veteran, who takes his family to the country for a retreat from the big city. While they are on the road, so is a bus full of convicts with Sylvetser Stallone's brother, that vampire from Subspecies and the aforementioned Vietnam vet with monsters in his closet. When the convicts breakout, they hijack DeYoung's RV and make him take them to their remote cabin. Enroute, the Vietnam vet convict loses his marbles and starts a bloody rampage, believing he is still in the bush.

    STORY: $$$ (This has an okay script. The fact that the hero is also a Vietnam vet makes it more watchable than the usual deranged, disgruntled vet killing everyone in his path, ala Don't Answer the Phone. We also get subplots with DeYoung's marriage on the rocks with Kay Lenz and Michael Watson as the pretty convict trying to prove that he isn't gay).

    ACTING: $$$ (The acting was a surprise. Cliff DeYoung is good as always, as is Kay Lenz in a supporting role as his wife. Zoe Trilling had yet to establish herself--she chews up much more scenery in films like Night Terrors and Night of the Demons II. But the best acting comes from an unlikely source: Frank Stallone. This role seemed perfect for his talents. Frank shines as an angry, ready-to-fight convict).

    SEXUALITY: $ (Nothing here. Stallone cops a feel on Zoe Trilling's ample breasts but he is taken care of before he can advance his troops).
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Haden family consists of father Don (De Young), mother Sharon (Lenz), son Brian (Schwartz) and daughter Jennifer (Trilling). They are an "average" suburban upper-middle-class clan with the normal preoccupations and concerns of a modern family of the 80's. Don and Sharon's marriage is on the rocks primarily because she wants to take a job in San Diego so they are constantly bickering, Jennifer is your standard spoiled, self-involved teenager and Brian is the pre-teen eager to get in his dad's good graces. They decide the best way to sort out all their problems is to go to "Uncle Billy's Cabin" in an RV. So they rent the motorhome and head out on a family road trip into the countryside.

    Meanwhile, some dangerous convicts are on the loose. They escaped a prison-transfer bus and are armed, dangerous, and looking for a family like the Hadens to provide them with...something. We don't really know. But Armitage (Stallone) is the the pugilistic neo-Nazi, Cyril is the "token African-American", Mitch (Michael Watson) is the confused "new meat" and Jack (Factor) is the Vietnam vet who is mentally disturbed and still believes he is fighting the war, and they take the family hostage. The twist is that the father, Don, is also a 'Nam vet (an ex-Green Beret), and will, eventually, after a lot of stupidity, attempt to save his family from the mixed bag of baddies. Can he do it? The film starts out with some Vietnam flashbacks, and leads into a bleak, gritty prison setting, so you think there's a chance this might be better than average. Once Fear kicks into being a standard hostage drama that adds nothing whatsoever to that sub-genre, you quickly realize that this is by-the-numbers, predictable fare. Some quality actors try to save it, but it's hopeless. It's just not exciting or entertaining.

    The best part of the movie is Scott Schwartz' Kidco (1984) shirt. Fear occupies a unique place in Schwartz' filmography. It's after Kidco, The Toy (1982) and A Christmas Story (1983) but before he started doing porn. We wish we had a Kidco shirt. Cult actress Zoe Trilling also has an interesting shirt. Isn't this review so in depth? She wears a shirt for, seemingly, a band called The Suburbs, but it screams "The costume designer saw this and it's really appropriate/ironic for this setting so now you'll wear it".

    Other aspects of Fear worth noting are the visit to "Link Reilly's Country Feed Bin". Just you watch out for that Abraham Lincoln Reilly (Bart Burns). He's yet another Vietnam vet. Also there seem to be two versions of Fear - one with all the swearing intact, and another one with the "dirty words" redubbed in a weird, yet hilarious fashion. I've seen the Virgin Vision VHS, as well as the version now playing on Comcast On Demand, and the On Demand version is redubbed with bizarre, "who are they trying to fool?" ADR, perhaps best exemplified when Frank Stallone aka Armitage shouts angrily, and I quote, "Fight You!" Why they did this is unclear, because other content in the film pretty much ensures this isn't going to be played on TBS anytime soon. It remains and R no matter what. So....why? This might also explain why, in the only recorded instance in history outside of Gary Busey in Bulletproof (1988), does one character actually say the word "Butthorn"! We rewound the movie to make sure. He says it. This adds fuel to what we said in the Bulletproof review, that "Butthorn" was an insult that really should have caught on, and an effort was made to put it in the popular consciousness, but somehow it just never took off. Despite the best efforts of Frank Stallone and Gary Busey. If that team can't make something work, I don't know what to believe in anymore.

    So after a lot of yelling, shooting, and unnecessarily terrorizing a family, I suppose the viewer was meant to come away with the clash of values between the family and the convicts. They're from two totally different worlds, and they clashed. The innocent family ran headlong into the totally new, different, violent world of the criminals. Then the family is supposed to realize that their life isn't so bad after all. But the viewer just doesn't care that much to get that invested.

    It may sound harsh, but Fear is really just VHS shelf-filler for the video stores of the 80's and 90's. It needed some kind of spark to make it stand out from the crowd, but sadly, that never happened. And Frank Stallone doesn't even sing.

    For more insanity, please visit: comeuppancereviews.com