Jungleground
Jungleground | |
---|---|
Directed by | Don Allan |
Written by | Michael Stokes |
Produced by | George Flak |
Starring | Roddy Piper Torri Higginson Peter Williams JR Bourne Rachel Wilson |
Cinematography | Gilles Corbeil |
Edited by | Marvin Lawrence |
Music by | Varouje Hagopian |
Production companies | Norstar Entertainment Performance Pictures |
Distributed by | Alliance Atlantis (Canada) Triboro Entertainment (U.S.) |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | CAD$2.5 million |
Jungleground is a 1995 Canadian action film directed by Don Allan and starring Roddy Piper, Torri Higginson, Peter Williams, JR Bourne and Rachel Wilson. Piper plays a cop challenged to a high stakes escape game by the ruler of a violent no-go zone (JR Bourne), who has kidnapped his girlfriend (Higginson) and threatens to kill her if he fails.
Plot
[edit]This article needs an improved plot summary. (November 2024) |
Cast
[edit]- Roddy Piper as Lt. Jake Cornell
- Torri Higginson as Sammy Woods
- Peter Williams as Dragon
- JR Bourne as Odin
- Rachel Wilson as Posie
- Joel Gordon as Gameshow
- Lexa Doig as Spider
- Nicholas Campbell as Robert Neilson
- Christopher Kennedy as Diesel
- Jason Blicker as Ferret
- Jeff Wood as Thor
- Michael A. Miranda as Slim (as Silvio Oliviero)
- Victoria Snow as Sgt. Purdy
- Damon D'Oliveira as Blackjack
- Anne Marie DeLuise as Whitney (as Anne Marie Loder)
- Robin Dunne as Pretty Boy
- Earl Pastko as Louis Brising
- Nicole de Boer as Caitlin Dean
Production
[edit]Jungleground was made by two Toronto companies, Peter R. Simpson's Norstar Entertainment and George Flak's Performance Pictures, who had worked with Piper the year prior on Back in Action.[1][2] It marked Piper's ninth feature film appearance.[3] Despite its familiar gang-based storyline, the star vouched to rise above mere exploitation, saying: "We don't want this to be just a fighter punching out a bunch of kids. Also, several of the characters are more than just stereotypes."[4] Don Allan of Revolver Pictures, a notable player in the field of music videos, made his first and only directorial feature with this film.[5]
Principal photography took place in the Toronto metropolitan area between mid July and late August 1994, shortly after No Contest, another Norstar production in which Piper played a supporting role.[3][6][5][7] The announced budget was CAD$2.5 million.[8] A section of Cherry Street, a public road in the south of the city, was flanked with rows of derelict cars to transform it into the main artery of the film's fictional crime district.[7] A number of extras, whom Piper described as "decent kids in bad situations", were actually drawn from local gangs.[4] Allan rented pieces from Hamilton plastician Antonella Sigismondi, a friend who had done art direction for several music videos, to represent the work of Torri Higginson's sculptor character.[9][10]
Release
[edit]Pre-release
[edit]The film was screened for industry professionals at the 1995 American Film Market in Santa Monica, and the MIFED in Milan.[11][12]
Home media
[edit]Jungleground debuted on Canadian and U.S. VHS on August 8, 1995.[13][14] In Canada, the film was part of a multi-picture distribution deal between Norstar and Malofilm.[8] In the U.S., it was picked up by Triboro Entertainment.[15] Triboro and disc-based media specialists Image Entertainment brought the film to LaserDisc on October 25, 1995.[16] Image also re-issued it on DVD on July 20, 1999.[17]
Reception
[edit]Commercial
[edit]According to numbers quoted from trade publication Video Store Magazine, Jungleground produced a strong return on investment of 164.2 percent for its rental outlets.[18]
Critical
[edit]Jungleground received mostly positive reviews. Mike Mayo of The Roanoke Times wrote that "[o]verall, the film's got an inventiveness, colorful characters and humor that fans expect of a good action movie, and Piper has the presence to carry it off.[14] Robert Philpot of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram assessed that "[f]ormer pro wrestler Roddy Piper has a way with a one-liner, and for all its derivativeness, the movie does have some original ideas".[19] In his publication VideoScope, genre critic Joe Kane described it as "Escape from New York meets The Most Dangerous Game", but added that "[f]ortunately, director Don Allan and crew keep the pace so blistering that this new sprint through old turf kept us pretty much glued".[20] LaserDisc News was in agreement, saying that "[t]he explosions are good and the narrative never slows down or gets sidetracked".[21]
Among dissenters was TV Guide, who opined that "[n]ot one minute of Jungleground is enlivened by any emotional subtext" while "[c]haracters only exist to be set up as potential homicides". It also deemed that comparisons with the recent and bigger-budgeted Hard Target and Surviving the Game did it no favor.[22] Gerard Fratley, author of the book A Century of Canadian Cinema, was strongly put off by Jungleground's violence. Calling it "[a]n odious film", he complained that "[p]unks are everywhere, buildings are decrepit, crime is rampant, brutal gang war rules, bullets fly and cars are aflame in a darkness that seems eternal. A love affair between a policeman and a dancer lightens this pit of depravity all too briefly."[23]
References
[edit]- ^ George Flak on LinkedIn
- ^ "George Flak – Executive Producer". trimatesdoc.com. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
- ^ a b Tarantino, Norman (September 7, 1995). "Is there a life after WWF?". The Weekender. Wilkes-Barre. p. 10 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b Ryan, Richard T. (August 18, 1995). "Roddy Piper plays a different tune". Staten Island Advance. p. B7 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b Cuthbert, Pamela (July 4, 1994). "Ontario scene". Playback. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
- ^ Shot in Ontario Master Spreadsheet (Up to 2021) (Report). Ontario Film Commission. August 9, 2022. Retrieved April 16, 2023.
- ^ a b "Boulevard of broken dreams". The Toronto Star. August 29, 1994. p. A3 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b "Malofilm inks deal". Playback. August 1, 1994. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
- ^ "50 Coolest People We Know". The Toronto Star/Hamilton This Month. April 29, 1995. p. 43 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ Mahoney, Jeff (June 13, 1996). "Antonella". The Hamilton Spectator. p. 7–8 (Ego) – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ Kelly, Brendan (February 19, 1995). "Canada Pix Thrive Despite Funding Cuts". Variety. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
- ^ Kelly, Brendan (October 29, 1995). "Plans to bring home more than just Canadian bacon". Variety. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
- ^ Law, John (August 8, 1995). "New releases at Movie Madness (Arriving Tuesday, Aug. 8)". Niagara Falls Review/Fort Erie Review Weekly. p. 2 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b Mayo, Mike (July 22, 1995). "Piper aims to put stranglehold on action genre". The Roanoke Times. p. B10, B8.
- ^ "Video: New releases". The Sun/Maryland Live. Baltimore. August 4, 1995. p. 19 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ "Jungleground (1995) [ID3036TB]". The LaserDisc Database. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
- ^ "Jungleground (1995): Releases". allmovie.com. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
- ^ Last to Surrender: A Collision Course with Profit! (screener cover), New York: Avalanche Home Entertainment, 1999, archived from the original on November 2, 2024, retrieved November 2, 2024
- ^ Philpot, Robert (July 8, 1995). "Video guide: Straight-to-video". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. p. D3 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ Kane, Joe (2000). The Phantom of the Movies' VideoScope. New York: Three Rivers Press. pp. 179–180. ISBN 0812931491.
- ^ Pratt, D. (1997). C. Edward Wall (ed.). Media Review Digest. Vol. 27. Ann Arbor: The Pierian Press. p. 235 – via LaserDisc News.
- ^ "Reviews: Jungleground". TV Guide. Retrieved March 29, 2024.
- ^ Pratley, Gerald (2003). A Century of Canadian Cinema: Feature film guide, 1900 to the present. Toronto: Lynx Images. p. 95. ISBN 1894073215.
External links
[edit]- Jungleground at IMDb
- Jungleground at AllMovie