Cut and Run backdrop
Cut and Run poster

CUT AND RUN

Inferno in diretta

1985 IT HMDB
August 8, 1985

A reporter and her cameraman connect a surviving Jonestown leader and a TV exec's missing son to a drug war where jungle installations are being massacred by an army of natives and a skilled white assassin.

Cast

👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Crew

Production: Alessandro Fracassi (Producer)
Screenplay: Cesare Frugoni (Screenplay)Dardano Sacchetti (Screenplay)
Music: Claudio Simonetti (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Alberto Spagnoli (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
An American television journalist sets out with a cameraman to interview a colonel responsible for a massacre in Guyana. Once in the Amazon, they will live through a terrible experience, but in the end, they will succeed in filming the end of the dictator live and returning home safe and sound. After the great success of "Cannibal Holocaust", Deodato returns to direct a genre film, although here cannibals have little to do with it. Slashings, beheadings, violence of all kinds on men and women, but everything seems "already seen" and even the most gruesome sequences lack the terrible expressive power of the cult film directed by Deodato himself in 1979. One of the protagonists, the irreproachable Luca Barbareschi, also plays a small cameo in the film as a helicopter pilot.
👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

South American jungle adventure with Lisa Blount and Richard Lynch

Shot in the summer of 1984, this was helmed by the director of “Cannibal Holocaust” from five years prior. Wes Craven was originally attached to the production when its working title was “Marimba,” but by the time it was made he had zero input, not even a writing credit. The only ostensible holdover from his involvement might be the intimidating Michael Berryman with his peculiar bald look; he of course was the main antagonist of Craven's “The Hills Have Eyes.”

Don’t expect a sense of humor, such as in the later “Blind Fury” (which has similarities). This is serious and savage jungle adventure that emphasizes the risks of daring reporters & crew, as well as the illegal drug trade and warfare thereof. Moreover, there’s an interesting tie-in to the Jonestown massacre of November 18, 1978 (which took place in Guyana, not far east of the border of Venezuela). The locations are outstanding with numerous shots of the Venezuelan flat-top mountains called Tepuis (plural), not to mention jungle waterways and waterfalls.

It's one of the best films to enjoy the presence of Lisa Blount since she plays the protagonist. If you’re not familiar with her, she played the blonde girlfriend of David Keith’s character in “An Officer and a Gentleman” three years earlier. Also in the female department is brunette Valentina Forte as Ana. Deodato liked to focus the camera on her, if you know what I mean.

“Apocalypse Now” was obviously an influence with the inclusion of jungle mayhem, helicopters, dancing beauties, beheadings and mentally dubious misfits in the bush, but it lacks the brooding mood of that iconic film, as well as fleshed-out characters and interesting dialogues. That takes time and creative tweaking which this production didn’t have. Still, as a quick jungle adventure it delivers.

It runs 1 hour, 26 minutes, and was shot in Venezuela and Miami.

GRADE: B-

Reviews provided by TMDB