Dangerously Close
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Marty Ross
John Stockwell
- John Stockwell
- Carey Lowell
- Madison Mason
- Bradford Bancroft
- J. Eddie Peck
| Dangerously Close | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Albert Pyun |
| Written by | Scott Fields Marty Ross John Stockwell |
| Produced by | Harold Sobel |
| Starring |
|
| Cinematography | Walt Lloyd |
| Edited by | Dennis M. O'Connor |
| Music by | Michael McCarty |
| Distributed by | The Cannon Group |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $1.5 million[1] |
| Box office | $2,026,765[2] |
Dangerously Close is a 1986 action thriller film directed by Albert Pyun. The film was noted at its time of release for being part of a wave of teen vigilante films in the 1980s exploring the right-wing jingoism that was gaining popularity in the United States.[3]
At an elite school, a group of students who call themselves The Sentinels begin terrorizing their socially undesirable classmates. Soon, one of their targets ends up brutally murdered. An editor of the high school paper begins to investigate and The Sentinels become even more ruthless in their behavior.
Cast
- John Stockwell as Randy McDevitt
- J. Eddie Peck as Donny Lennox
- Carey Lowell as Julie
- Bradford Bancroft as Krooger Raines
- Don Michael Paul as "Ripper"
- Thom Mathews as Brian Rigletti
- Gerard Christopher as Lang Bridges
- Madison Mason as Corrigan
- Anthony De Longis as Smith Raddock
- Carmen Argenziano as Molly
- Miguel A. Nunez Jr. as Leon Biggs
- Dedee Pfeiffer as Nikki
- Karen Lorre as Betsy
- Greg Finley as Morelli
- Debra Berger as Ms. Hoffman
- Angel Tompkins as Ms. Waters
- Rosalind Allen as Mrs. McDonald
- David Boyle as Mr. McDonald
- Eric Bartsch as Pete Bentley
- Joe Nipote as Steve
- Tony Kienitz as Paul
- Dru-Anne Perry as Barbie
- Paul Mitchell Rosenblum as Toby
- Kelly Chapman as Bobbi Page
- Rebecca Cruz as Vanessa
- Dan Bradley as Bouncer
- Brian Maguire as Police Sergeant
- William Zimmerman as Policeman
- Tom Fridley as Student
Soundtrack
The film features music from The Smithereens, who sang the film's theme song, "Blood and Roses," Depeche Mode, Black Uhuru, Green on Red, TSOL, Lords of the New Church, Lost Pilots, and Michael McCarty.
Release
Dangerously Close received a wide release in North America on May 9, 1986 grossing $1,180,506 its first week, falling to $474,260 in its second week.[2]