The Killing Machine (1994 film)
The Killing Machine | |
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Directed by | David Mitchell |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | David Pelletier |
Edited by | David Buder |
Music by | Ronald J. Weiss |
Production companies | Amritraj Entertainment Richmond House |
Release dates | September 1994 (Canada) January 1995 (U.S.) |
Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | CAD$750,000 |
The Killing Machine (also known as The Killing Man) is a 1995 Canadian psychological thriller film written and directed by David Mitchell, starring Jeff Wincott and Michael Ironside. In it, an amnesiac contract killer seeking to escape the clutches of a shadowy government agency allies with a whistleblower, who may have uncovered a conspiracy regarding the human engineering of the AIDS epidemic.
Plot
Professional hitman Harlin Garrett is left for dead, the victim of a hit orchestrated by his mafia employers after they decide he has outlived his usefulness to them. He wakes up in a secluded facility under the watch of a covert government agency led by a menacing man only known as Mr. Green. Garrett, who is amnesiac and initially has no recollection of his violent proclivities, is coaxed and trained into killing again on the agency's behalf.
This time, his mission is to wipe out various activists who have ties to HIV research or the homosexual community. Garrett's key target is scientist Ann Kendall, who seems to have proof that the spread of the virus has been enabled by the government. But Garrett, who has been tasked with seducing Kendall before killing her to find out how much she knows, ends up falling for her and turns against his new employers.
Cast
- Jeff Wincott as Harlin Garrett
- Michael Ironside as Mr. Green
- Terri Hawkes as Dr. Ann Kendall
- David Campbell as Turner
- Calista Carradine as Jane
- Richard Fitzpatrick as Baker
- Jeff Pustil as Conners
- Michael Copeman as Steve Rogers
- David Bolt as Tom Hansen
- Doug O'Keeffe as Sgt. Terry
Production
The Killing Machine was the first of several Jeff Wincott starrers from Canadian producer Damian Lee, following a string of vehicles with fellow Canadian producer Pierre David. Unlike David's films, which were made in the U.S., those were shot in Canada. The Killing Machine was filmed in the Toronto area between December 4 and December 23, 1993.[1] The actor reported being ill-at-ease with some of the film's nudity, which caused him to botch a few takes due to his nervousness.[2] The picture had a modest budget of CAD$750,000.[3]
Release
The film received theatrical distribution in its native Canada in the form of a touring regional release from Cinépix/Famous Players Distribution. It was shown in the Toronto area in late September 1994[4][5] and the Vancouver area in early November,[6] before a slightly longer run in Montreal in the second half of December, which benefited from some adverts in the press.[7] The home video release, which was promoted by some local media appearances from Wincott, followed on January 4, 1995, from sister company C/FP Video.[2][3]
In the U.S., the film premiered on home video in the third week of January 1995 under the alternate title The Killing Man, via A-Pix Entertainment.[8]
Reception
In his column for the New York Daily News, genre critic Joe Kane praised the film as a "reel surprise" and "a lean, mean existentialist thriller", praising Ironside's performance and Mitchell's dark script.[8] TV Guide took the opposite stance, finding particular fault with the film's use of homosexuality and HIV as plot devices, and assessing: "Although the villain of this muddled piece is a reactionary, [...] what's truly unsettling is how callously this numbskull action pic uses the plague of contemporary times as a plot-prop for human carnage and macho flag-waving."[9]
Later films
Wincott appeared in four more vehicles for Lee: Law of the Jungle, The Donor, No Exit and When The Bullet Hits the Bone, the first three being made for Amritraj Entertainment. In 2006, Mitchell produced and directed The Ultimate Killing Machine, a film that explores broadly similar themes of government-engineered human weapons in a more horrific tone, although there is no direct narrative continuity between the two.[10]
References
- ^ Zekas, Rita (November 24, 1993). "Star gazing". The Toronto Star. p. D1 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b Inwood, Damien (January 3, 1995). "Nude scene made him 'nervous'". The Province. Vancouver. p. B4 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b Riches, Hester (December 10, 1994). "The Next Action Hero". Vancouver Sun. p. B4 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ "Famous Players showtimes". The Toronto Star. September 27, 1994. p. B7 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ "Famous Players showtimes". The Toronto Star. September 28, 1994. p. D3 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ "Famous Players showtimes". Surrey/North Delta Leader. 6 November 1994. p. B6 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ C/FP Distribution (December 16, 1994). "The Killing Machine advert". The Gazette. p. C4 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ a b "Martial-smart 'The Killing Man' delivers a deft chop to the system". Daily News. New York. January 11, 1995. p. 35 – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
- ^ "The Killing Man: Review". TV Guide. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
- ^ Newman, Kim (September 2017). "UKM: The Ultimate Killing Machine (2006)". Video Dungeon: The Collected Reviews. London: Titan Books. ISBN 9781783299393.