SYNOPSICS
Pure Danger (1996) is a English movie. C. Thomas Howell has directed this movie. C. Thomas Howell,Teri Ann Linn,Michael Russo,Marcus Chong are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1996. Pure Danger (1996) is considered one of the best Action,Thriller movie in India and around the world.
A dying gangster stumbles into an out-of-the-way restaurant with a bag of diamonds. Two employees take off with the jewels only to be chased by warring gangs.
Same Actors
Same Director
Pure Danger (1996) Reviews
Hilarious action picture that doesn't take itself too seriously. .
Solid cast, funny, dangerously exciting, excellent action sequences. Script seemed appropriate for this eccentric film noir and cast supported it. C.T. had his hands full.
See it for the final chase
From the early to mid-90s, PM Entertainment was my favorite exploitation, DTV company. They delivered competent productions that delivered some of the best slam bang action of the time period. Forget the computer enhanced stunts in TRUE LIES or ERASER...PM is where it was at. This crime flick marks the third directorial effort by actor C. Thomas Howell (his second for PM Entertainment after the detective film THE BIG FALL) and is a perfect example of the "everything must be like Tarantino" era in Hollywood in the wake of PULP FICTION. Howell stars as Johnie Dean, an ex-con now working as a short order cook. When a bag of diamonds fall into his lap, Johnie and his waitress girlfriend become targets of several gangs looking to steal the diamonds. Yes, it is TRUE ROMANCE with diamonds instead of cocaine. Howell and company seem to be having a good time with this production. It never takes itself too seriously (how could anyone take Howell seriously with that mustache?) and features an amazing final chase scene coordinated by Spiros Razatos. Seriously, this car chase is one of the scariest things I have ever seen featuring real cars screeching, exploding and flipping right in front of each other. I am still trying to figure how they got permits to film this stuff on LA's streets and highways. John Landis would be proud. Howell also populates his cast with some familiar faces including Leon (dressed exactly like Samuel L. Jackson in PULP FICTION), Michael Russo, Macrus Chong, Irwin Keyes and Carrot Top!
Another "True Romance" knockoff
B-movie thespian C. Thomas Howell did double duty on "Pure Danger." Not only did he slip behind the camera to helm it, but he also as plays the protagonist. This preposterous but entertaining action comedy may remind you of Tony Scott's "True Romance." Howell plays Johnny Dean, a short-order cook wrongly convicted for a crime that he didn't commit and sent to prison for two years. Dean has another six months left on his probation because he didn't make it punctually to his last appointment with his parole officer. Make no mistake, Johnny is a loser and he drags down a pretty waitress, Becky (Terri Ann Linn of "Fallout") with him when he embarks on a desperate bid to elude mobsters of every description. Meanwhile, several trigger-happy thugs are blasting away each other without a qualm over a fortune in diamonds. The profane DePalma (Michael Russo) leads one gang of well-dressed thugs. An icy cold African-American gangster Felix (Leon of "Waiting to Exhale") clashes with DePalma and pursues Johnny and Becky through the movie. Leon has the best line that is far too profane to repeat here. This outlandish late-night, straight-to-video, shoot'em up boasts a delicious sense of irony. Some of the dialogue by Joseph John Barmettler and William Applegate Jr. isn't bad. Howell directs with a sense of humor and speed, and "Pure Danger" never sacrifices momentum on the way to fadeout. Veteran stunt man Spiro Razatos, who coordinated the stunts on "Swordfish," "Bad Boys," "Fast & Furious 6," and "Captain America: The Winter Soldier," stages some explosive, top-notch, car crashes in downtown Los Angeles that will make you sit up and say "Wow!" The acting is a mixed bag, but "Pure Danger" amounts to nothing but pure fun throughout its zany but blood-splattered 99 minutes. The ending is a real hoot, too.
Great pulp action flick
This movie is very entertaining and has some great cameos from terrific actors. C.T. Howell is awesome as an ex-con and down and out wise cracking cook who finds himself working in diner hell somewhere in the middle of nowhere. When thugs converge on the remote diner he works at, a black gang comes to take the diamonds from the racist mobsters and a point blank shoot out leave bodies and the bag of diamonds that C.T.'s character and the waitress he works with seize the golden opportunity to get out of their dim existence and make the big time. They know where to cash in the diamonds but their lives are in constant peril as both the mob and the black gangsters are in hot pursuit. The rest of the movie is a thriller action roller coaster that is very entertaining and worth the watch.
Poor Dice!
OK, so this film is not high art. The plot is a bit thin, the lead actress is more wooden than my garden furniture and some of the dialogue is a bit embarrassing. Nevertheless, this film does have a lot to offer! Firstly, any film with C. Thomas Howell can't be all bad. As usual, he rises above his material and gives another great performance. I also found his direction to be lively and creative. Somebody give this man a budget and a script editor for his next directing foray and there will be no stopping him! The film itself is not without charm. I loved the character of Dice. The scene where he tries to fence the diamonds to a mafia boss, while he's sitting on the toilet is worth the rental price alone! Likewise, the scene where Dice's girlfriend comes up with a most unusual hiding place for bounty is a stroke of genius. Throw in a great final car chase, a couple of completely gratuitous scenes in strip clubs and some so-bad-it's-GREAT dialogue and you really can't go wrong for a fun hour and a half of entertainment. Highly recommended for the more forgiving viewer!