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Fighting Back
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(BLU-RAY US Import) (US-Import)
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Lieferstatus:
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i.d.R. innert 7-21 Tagen versandfertig
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VÖ :
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04.07.2023
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EAN-Code:
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76013712376 |
Aka:
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Death Vengeance Philadelphia Security Street Wars Striking Back The Last Safe Place
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Jahr/Land:
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1982 ( USA ) |
FSK/Rating:
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R |
Genre:
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Action
/ Krimi
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Blu-Ray |
Bewertung: |
Titel bewerten / Meinung schreiben
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Inhalt: |
ENOUGH lS ENOUGH!
The streets of Philadelphia are unsafe, but John D'Angelo has a solution. Thieves, pimps, and pushers beware: he's decIaring a personal war on crime. From the director of Alligator and the producer of Death Wish comes Fighting Back!
Tom Skerritt (M*A*S*H, Alien) stars as John D'AngeIo, a proud husband and father fed up with the crime and fear his famiIy endures everyday. When his wife, Lisa (Patti LuPone) and elderIy mother are both victims of violent attacks, he organizes a team of locals to operate as a neighborhood patrol group. But when the patrol resorts to vigilante tactics, the Iines between protection and personal vendetta become blurred, resulting in vioIence and corruption.
Directed by Lewis Teague from a script by Thomas HedIey Jr. (FIashdance) and David Z. Goodman (Straw Dogs), featuring a supporting cast that includes MichaeI Sarrazin (Frankenstein: The True Story) and Yaphet Kotto (Live and Let Die) and with a score by ceIebrated ltalian composer Piero Piccioni (Christ Stopped at Eboli), Fighting Back (released overseas as Death Vengeance) finally makes its blistering BIu-ray debut!
LlMITED EDITlON CONTENTS
High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray presentation
OriginaI lossless mono audio
OptionaI EngIish subtitIes for the deaf and hard of hearing
Enough is Enough!, a new interview with director Lewis Teague
Danny-Cam, a new interview with camera operator DanieIe Nannuzzi
TraiIer
TV Spot
lmage gaIIery
Double-sided fold-out poster featuring original and newIy commissioned artwork by Luke lnsect
ReversibIe sIeeve featuring original and newIy commissioned artwork by Luke Insect
IIIustrated colIector's bookIet featuring new writing on the film by critics Rob SkvarIa and Walter Chaw, and a career-spanning interview with director Lewis Teague |
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