Trawling the depths of forgotten fiction, films, and beyond, with yer pal, Joe Kenney
Actually, word has it that the true story is a bit more than that. Apparently Buntzman did create a lurid movie along the lines of The Exterminator, however since the sequel was being released by those fine purveyors of Stupid Action Movies, The Canon Group, the workprint Buntzman turned in was deemed unreleasable by Canon standards and so a wealth of new material was shot, all of it action scenes.
Leading man Robert Ginty returns as John "Exterminator" Eastland. As the movie poster claims: "In the Exterminator he made the streets of New York safe. All has been quiet -- until now!" Leaving aside the absurd second sentence -- when have the streets of New York ever been "quiet?" -- Eastman is a middling lead character at best. A 'Nam vet who got vengeance in the first film, here he's a cipher who stumbles about NYC with vacant eyes.
Or maybe that's just Ginty himself, never the most vibrant (or memorable) of actors:
You captured it pretty well. One of the worst films ever made, bad by even really bad 80s trash movie standards. But for all that, strangely entertaining. The Peebles character was so ludicrous it was enjoyable.
I normally like Cannon movies, but from what I saw of this movie in its trailer, it didn’t seem like my kind of thing.The first Exterminator wasn’t a vigilante picture in the Cannon style of say Death Wish IV: The Crackdown (1987) (my favourite of the series); it was more subdued and melancholy, with occasional intense moments like the meat grinder scene. The Exterminator was made in 1980, which means it’s still partly a low-affect 1970s movie. It can be suspenseful or tiresome, depending on how much stuff you like to have happening in a movie.
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You captured it pretty well. One of the worst films ever made, bad by even really bad 80s trash movie standards. But for all that, strangely entertaining. The Peebles character was so ludicrous it was enjoyable.
I normally like Cannon movies, but from what I saw of this movie in its trailer, it didn’t seem like my kind of thing.
The first Exterminator wasn’t a vigilante picture in the Cannon style of say Death Wish IV: The Crackdown (1987) (my favourite of the series); it was more subdued and melancholy, with occasional intense moments like the meat grinder scene. The Exterminator was made in 1980, which means it’s still partly a low-affect 1970s movie. It can be suspenseful or tiresome, depending on how much stuff you like to have happening in a movie.
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