Adventure | Science Fiction | Action
Neo, a drifter from the atomic-blasted wastelands, arrives with his klutzy robot sidekick at a factory where slaves labor to fuel the sinister Dark One’s Power Station. There, he meets a comely woman who convinces him to help rescue her scientist father, who has invented a device that can break the Dark One’s control over the slaves. Gathering a motley crew of allies on the way, Neo and pals travel to the Power Station, where they confront the Dark One’s evil servants.
Length 79 minutes
Norris Culf | Nadine Hartstein | J. Buzz Von Ornsteiner | Jennifer Delora | Andrew Howarth | Angelika Jager | Rick Gianasi | Michael Downend | Nicholas Reiner | Michael Azzolina | John Blaylock | Michael Zezima | Edward R. Mallia | Amy Brentano | Dave Martin | Keith Schwabinger | George Grey
Date Viewed | Device | Format | Source | Rating |
---|---|---|---|---|
12/18/2011 | Computer | Other | Other | 5 stars |
(Average) 5 stars |
Watched this Tim Kincaid joint on my return flight to Chicago. Dumb! DTV flick by a crew that later wished they could have gotten jobs on Hercules: The Legendary Journeys or Cleopatra 2525. That’s because Robot Holocaust is like a mashup of both of those series a decade earlier. This is a Tim Kincaid joint (he of Mutant Hunt) and everything here is low-rent and laughable. The line readings are particularly notable; I have good reason to believe it was the first reading they did for the film. Also, this post-apocalyptic world hasn’t changed a bit since the apparent “apocalypse” as characters are wandering in fields in and around a very 80s New York City. Yeah, this is a bad film and, yeah, I would watch it again.
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