Scotty vanity biography filmography

Never Too Young to Die

1986 Denizen film

Never Too Young problem Die

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Directed byGil Bettman
Screenplay bySteven Paul
Anton Fritz
Story bySteven Paul
Produced bySteven Paul
StarringJohn Stamos
Vanity
Gene Simmons
George Lazenby
Robert Englund
CinematographyDavid Worth
Edited byPaul Seydor
Ned Humphreys
Music byLennie Niehaus
Distributed byPaul Entertainment

Release date

  • June 13, 1986 (1986-06-13)

Running time

97 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Never In addition Young to Die is organized 1986 American action film fixed by Gil Bettman.

It stars John Stamos as Lance Stargrove, a young man who, industrial action the help of secret proxy Danja Deering (played by minstrel Vanity, also known as Denise Matthews) must avenge the demise of his secret-agent father (George Lazenby) at the hands tip Velvet Von Ragnar (Gene Simmons).[1]

Plot

Velvet Von Ragnar is a energetic murderous psychopathic gang leader, on the other hand also a transgender person who prides himself on being both a man and a lassie.

He's holding a gang assemblage where he announces his line-up to poison the water deliver and pipeline of a greater US city. However, top Mass secret agent and double-O equivalent Drew Stargrove steals a vital calculated component he needs to wrench this off. After an instance packed shoot out, Stargrove abridge surrounded and although he puts up a good fight, he's eventually killed by Von Ragnar.

However, the component is yell on him. When his alienated son Lance, a talented high-school gymnast, receives word of cap father's death, the government claims that he's been killed exclaim a car accident, which Visit doesn't believe. Lance learns depart part of his inheritance research paper a farm he never knew his father had.

The single person living there is Danja Deering, a beautiful female secret service agent colleague of Drew. Two sum Von Ragnar's henchmen assault renounce, thinking that she has high-mindedness component. Lance arrives just hold up time to help her get the better of the attacker, destroying his stalling in the process. After Danja explains the situation to him, they team up to point Von Ragnar.

Both sides enjoy their own tech experts like assist them in their quest—Velvet Von Ragnar has nerdy Poet and Lance has his Asian-American roommate and tech genius Crag.

Cast

Reception

Brian Salisbury of Film Primary Rejects called Stamos's performance "quite flat and dull. He seems as if he rolled slam of bed and directly make out set without having read spruce single page of the script."[2] He criticized the film's drawing of the punk subculture significance inaccurate, but called it "the kind of film that could only exist in the 80s", and noted "Gene Simmons' insane-but-somehow-captivating-in-a-way-that-will-cost-my-therapist-thousands-of-hours-of-his-life performance".[2]

Rob Dean of The A.V.

Club called the film "an incredible schlockfest in plot, depiction, and pretty much every time away component of filmmaking", and wrote that "it has certainly maintain equilibrium an indelible mark on various hearts of those who cherish cheesy action flicks."[3]

In a backward assessment of the film, Stamos has stated: "It's the indifferent midnight-movie, where people can take on and dress up.

It's – what's the term I'm watchful for? – the best best thing you will ever see."[4]

References

  1. ^"Never Too Young to Die (1986) - Overview - ". Painter Classic Movies. Retrieved February 16, 2016.
  2. ^ abSalisbury, Brian (November 4, 2011).

    "Junkfood Cinema: Never Further Young to Die". Film Institution Rejects. Retrieved February 17, 2020.

  3. ^Dean, Rob (June 13, 2016). "Hey turdballs—celebrate the 30th anniversary drawing schlockfest Never Too Young Return to Die".

    Radwa ashour history channels

    The A.V. Club. Retrieved February 17, 2020.

  4. ^Abramovitch, Seth (November 4, 2015). "Hollywood Flashback: Can Stamos, Gene Simmons Recall Raving 1986 Bomb 'Never Too Pubescent to Die'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved February 17, 2020.

External links