Product Details
The Killing Man

The Killing Man
Directed by David Mitchell

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #80094 in DVD
  • Released on: 1998-01-30
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 91 minutes

Customer Reviews

One of the Best B-Action Flicks Ever.4
Paranoid atmosphere, strong camera work, brutal action scenes, and amazingly good acting combine to make this flick unique in its class. Low budget action movies are usually stagey and mechanical, with actors sleepwalking through their roles. Not here. Michael Ironside's simple death scene is acted with such enthusiasm that it stops the show. And Jeff Wincott is the most underrated hero in the movies today. Action fans will not be disappointed.

actually not bad3
" I feel pain, I must be alive" begins this movie as a mob killer awakes in the care of an autonomous government agency that has nursed him back to health after a deadly fire in which he was thought to have been killed. They plan to use him for several hits on scientists who have discovered AIDS to be a laboratory created disease. Though it's never said, you get the sense that they will either kill him or expose him after he does the last hit who happens to be a cutie doctor. So you can probably guess what happens in the end, but all in all it's an interesting story worth viewing if you like this type of flick.

The one bad thing about this DVD is the sound and picture quality, it's not that great (kinda dark and grainy), but acceptable... I can't really complain.

excellent movie in ways you wouldn't expect4
I purchased Killing Man for one simple reason - Jeff Wincott. I have been constantly impressed with this guy's solid martial arts skills, and ability to actually act well. Thinkin that Killing Man would be another Wincott action blast with some decent acting and an ok story, the movie provided a from of entertainment I did not see coming.

Instead of an all-out action fest, Killing Man felt a lot more like a suspense/thriller with the action thrown in. Jeff Wincott, though does not give a martial arts filled movie like many of his others, instead delivers a sharp performance in acting and creating a unique and defined charcater, "Harlin Garrett" aka "The Killing Man". Saved from death by a so-called branch of the government led by Mr. Green (Michael Ironside), Harlin is basically brainwashed to kill and eliminate the slime of society in order to stay alive. Finding it difficult to grasp at first, Harlin begins to fall into the habit, until he falls for a woman he has been ordered to kill. This is where the movie gets very exicitng.

In addition to Wincott, the supporting actors do a better job than expected for a low-budget B movie. Michael Ironside, as always, delivers a solid performance as the bad guy. Killing Man has a dark tone throughout, and begins especially eerie in a dark and desolate hospital for Harlin. I enjoyed the fact that Harlin falls for an ordinary girl, and not some usual blonde bimbo.

Overall, Killing Man is not a martial arts film, and very little action film at that. While there is some action throughout, it is very real and timed out with the story. All together, it works well. Expect good suspense upon watching the first time, and one of Jeff Wincott's best acting performances so far.