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Dangerous Men

Play trailer 1:31 Poster for Dangerous Men 2005 1h 20m Action Comedy Play Trailer Watchlist
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After two bikers murder her fiance, a grief-stricken woman embarks on a quest for revenge against men.
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Dangerous Men

Critics Reviews

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Daniel Barnes Dare Daniel 09/01/2020
2/5
Over 20 years in the making, Dangerous Men is wildly inept in a manner so unique that it's almost visionary. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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10/05/2016 So bad it's actually painful to watch. See more 04/18/2016 Drafthouse Films has become excellent at marketing forgotten movies. Their target: hipsters seeking nostalgia and artifacts to certify their eclectic tastes. The Policeman Police Edition of Dangerous Men includes everything you need to become an instant expert of this obscure film -- and the trinkets to act out a child-like consumer obsession. Posters, Soundtrack, Blu-ray, DVD, AND a pewter Police Badge!!! I try to avoid wearing the 'hipster' label. But I am the Generation Y son of young Gen-X parents. Undoubtedly within the Hipster demographic. We're the kids who got a solid taste of 1980's neon-synth style. The tweens who came-of-age in the era of perfected merchandising. Austin, Texas-based (surprise!) Drafthouse Films caters to nostalgia for the days of our infancy and your desires for shiny collectible trinkets. 20 years from now, people won't see the brilliance in selling a VHS cassette with a blu-ray in 2010. Drafthouse did just that with Miami Connection. Miami Connection was my introduction to Drafthouse Films. I didn't pony up for the VHS (good only as a doorstop in my tiny NYC apartment) but the amazing trailer won over my wife and I. The trailer is honestly the best thing that has anything to do with Miami Connection. Miami Connection, like Dangerous Men, is the kind of adventure you take with friends. Countless nights of my youth were spent laughing over cheap movies with the guys. These films are perfect fodder for your Mystery Science Theater 3000 home game. Dangerous Men is a better film than Miami Connection. It is immediately clear that filmmaker John S. Rad (yep) was a pretty literate guy. Mr. Rad also does surprisingly well behind the camera, for a complete novice. At times the production feels close to, studio, B-movie quality. The acting is clunky, the editing is loose, and the movie is overlong. But it moves better than some episodes of Rockford Files. A senseless biker gang murder kicks off the career of a new serial killer. The film almost plays like a PSA to young women. The message being that all men will attempt rape if given the opportunity (hey I didn't make the movie!). Or it's just a PSA about avoiding the beach and, somewhat reasonably, hitch-hiking. Much more interesting than the movie itself, is the story behind the production. Again, as with Miami Connection, Drafthouse really went all-out. This home video release is loaded with production information and filmmaker involvement. I enjoyed the interviews with the late Mr. Rad's daughter and grandchildren (which re-enforced my "PSA" theory). I plan to experience all the features on the disc at least once. Writer, Director, Producer, and Composer John S. Rad moved to the U.S. from Persia after the fall of the Shah of Iran. Over the course of three decades, he privately funded his dream project: the film Dangerous Men. Perhaps feeling his mortality in 2005, Mr. Rad spent his savings to release his completed film. He rented theaters to screen the movie and bought advertising time on MTV. Mr. Rad was now a Distributor, in addition to all the other roles he had played during the production of the film. The ads caught the right eyes and through word of mouth the film developed a cult following. It was another handful of years before Drafthouse Films and the "Rad" family agreed to a home video distribution deal. It's a great story! Much to my wife's chagrin, I am one of the millions of artists who would love to be the next John Rad. After watching Miami Connection, once alone and then again with some friends, I sold my copy. Dangerous Men is destined for the same exit. As a younger, unmarried, man I may have kept these movies for ritualistic watch parties. Now, as a busy adult, these discs aren't strong enough to warrant shelf space. Keep in mind that near-Z-grade schlock like Raw Force and Boarding House have permanent space in my home. It may just be my personal eccentricities that decide which discs stay and which ones go. But I believe I can measure it as the "shocks per minute" of the films. Miami Connection and Dangerous Men can be long slogs through loosely edited scenes. Even at a whopping 157 minutes, Boarding House provides enough jolting weirdness to keep me engaged. Fans of B-films and below should give Drafthouse' disc a thorough watch, and at least one time through with a group. Don't forget the alcohol and party favors. See more 04/26/2009 Cinefamily has started showing this regularly, since after mainstream media coverage THE ROOM has become the Strokes of so-bad-it's-good cult classics. DANGEROUS MEN is actually slightly worse as a movie than THE ROOM, and slightly less enjoyable as an experience, but it may improve as the cult audience develops their talkback script. A must-see. See more 04/26/2009 Pure Solid Gold! I'm not sure if it's the under developed, random, meaningless scenes or the flat casio synthesizer soundtrack or maybe the awkward casting that caught me in constant 'what the fuck' moments, but this is hands down the best bad film ever! Rivals 'Manos Hands of Fate'. See more Read all reviews
Dangerous Men

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Movie Info

Synopsis After two bikers murder her fiance, a grief-stricken woman embarks on a quest for revenge against men.
Director
John S. Rad
Producer
John S. Rad
Screenwriter
John S. Rad
Production Co
Simma Sim Productions
Genre
Action, Comedy
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 23, 2005, Limited
Rerelease Date (Theaters)
Nov 13, 2015
Release Date (Streaming)
Dec 11, 2016
Runtime
1h 20m
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