Trancers | | Cast : | Tim Thomerson, Helen Hunt | | Director : | Charles Band | | Studio : | Full Moon Home Video | | Format : | Color, Widescreen, Dolby | | Released Date : | January 01, 1985 | | DVD Released Date : | April 23, 2002 | | Language : | English (Dubbed), English (Original Language) | | Audience Rating : | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) | | | BUY THIS DVD FROM AMAZON | Customer Reviews
| Rating |    | | Date | March 03, 2005 | | Summary | Introducing Jack Deth | Content
 | Jack is a cop in the future. He has been tracking down trancers, people of week minds who have been tranced by a master criminal. Activation of their trancing causes them to turn yellow and violent.
After eliminating a trancer, Jack is told that the mastermind behind the trancers has managed to travel to the twentieth century in order to wipe out the ancestors of his enemies. Jack is sent after him.
While tracking the trancers and his main quarry, Jack meets Helen Hunt and a relationship develops. But all is not well with the investigation and Jack may get pulled from the case. Later he has to consider the possibility of self-sacrifice in order to complete his mission.
Not a bad little film. It would have been better if there was a little more explanation regarding trancers as a whole and not just the short (three-sentence) narrative at the opening. Other than that the movie works and uses time travel in a clever way that is fresh. If you are looking for a bit of entertainment that is not too heavy and doesn't need any real deep thinking, give Jack Deth a try. |
| Rating |      | | Date | November 21, 2003 | | Summary | Trancers | Content
 | One of the greatest movie ever made! I wish all the other ones were out as well! I had 7 of them on vhs! I miss them! Jack death is totally cool in it!! Great special effects! Great story! The time is the future and the country has changed! Police are called troopers and that is what jack is! His job is to kill trancers to save the human race. He is a man that you can count on to do his job. In the future there is a war between the humans and the trancers with whistler who is the head of the trancers to went down the line to the past in the body of his ancestor who was a police officer. Jack must fight impossible odds to try to save whistler ancestor and himself and the world. Just a little bit to get the juices flowing! |
| Rating |     | | Date | July 25, 2003 | | Summary | Eerily Entertaining Sci-Fi Movie | Content
 | "What kind of name is Peter Gunn?" "What kind of name is Jack Deth?" is just one of the memorable lines you will see in this low budget 1985 cult thriller "Trancers," starring the ever reliable Tim Thomerson and a struggling Helen Hunt. "Trancers" spawned five sequels, all of which never quite duplicated the fun of the original. I saw somewhere on the Internet that Thomerson is the "King of the B movies," but "Trancers" is the one film he made that stands head and shoulders above all others. If you draw a blank with the name "Tim Thomerson," you most likely saw him in a few bigger budget pictures, such as "Air America, "Uncommon Valor," and "Who's Harry Crumb?" He's done television work as well, appearing on "Xena" and "The Days of Our Lives." Once you recognize Thomerson, you'll remember his appearance in numerous films. Helen Hunt should need no introduction, but the fact that she appears in this low budget film is oddly jarring. Hunt went on to appear in two "Trancers" sequels before moving on to "Mad About You" and eventual stardom. "Trancers" opens with a futuristic L.A. The majority of Los Angeles sits under water, a victim of a massive earthquake. A council rules the remaining areas of the city, but their reign is under fire by a man named Whistler, an evil psychic with the ability to put certain weak-minded people (called squids) under a "trance." Whistler hopes to overthrow the council with his trancer shock troops. Trancers tend to be rather ugly blokes, with crusty looking lips and yellowish skin. The council dealt a series of blows to Whistler and his movement with the help of trancer hunters like Jack Deth. Deth and his fellow officers move around the city, hunting down trancers in order to kill them. Jack refers to this process as "singeing" because a trancer shot with a gun burns away, leaving only a black, ashy outline on the ground. After Jack quits the force over a dispute with his boss, he's suddenly called back to duty when an emergency arises. It seems Whistler sent himself "down the line" (read: time traveled into the past) to Los Angeles in 1985, where he hopes to hatch a plan that will doom the council and allow himself to take over. Jack Deth must now follow Whistler back in time in order to put an end to the nightmare of the trancers. When Jack goes down the line he meets Lena (Helen Hunt), who quickly becomes a part of the mission to track down Whistler. Predictably, a romance springs up between Deth and Lena as the two race around L.A. battling Whistler's new batch of trancers. It's difficult to tell if "Trancers" is a serious science fiction film or a sly spoof. There are a lot of gags and jokes centered on Christmas in 1985 Los Angeles, especially with Lena's job as an elf at a department store. I don't want to spoil this scene for you, but it is one of the funniest things I've seen in awhile. Imagine a battle with foam candy canes, a set of antlers, and a falling Christmas prop and you'll get the idea. This battle in the mall also leads to one of the funniest lines in the film when a lady calls security on a walkie-talkie and squawks, "Security, we've got trouble at the North Pole." If the idea of a singed Santa named Murray appeals to you, buy "Trancers" right away. There are other elements in this film that might appeal to the dedicated cheese lover. Watch how Thomerson drives the car; his hands twist and turn the wheel but the car continues moving in a straight line. Then there is the deadly effect of a tanning booth, which apparently can radiate enough heat to singe a raincoat or burn hands. Jack's special watch, which can freeze time for ten seconds, seems to stop time for minutes. These are small problems that instead of detracting from the film actually serve to add a chuckle or two. Arguably, the biggest joke in the film is the trancers themselves. They aren't that hard to kill, don't look particularly scary or dangerous, and have absolutely no powers whatsoever. You'd figure that at the very least the trancers would possess some sort of psychic power with which to threaten our heroes. You'd be wrong. These guys are so weak you could kill them by hitting them over the head with a rolled up newspaper. Be sure and watch for Deth's first encounter with a trancer in the diner of the future L.A.; I laughed for a long time over the uppercut he delivers to an old waitress when she turns out to be a trancer. "Trancers" is actually entertaining overall, with an occasionally cool soundtrack, funny dialogue, and better acting than one usually finds in a movie of this caliber. I really enjoyed Thomerson as Jack Deth; he's fun to watch and actually makes you root for his character. It's too bad the people who made the DVD didn't take the film seriously, as the transfer is fuzzy, there's a dead spot in the middle of the movie, and no commentary. What the DVD does have, amazingly enough, is a whopping FORTY-FIVE trailers on the reverse side of the disc. Sure, the trailers are for low budget clunkers like "Puppet Master" and "Robot Wars," but it's still great to watch them. For the price, "Trancers" is well worth the time. Hopefully, the rest of the series will come out on DVD soon. |
| Rating |     | | Date | January 21, 2003 | | Summary | Jack Deth is BACK! | Content
 | And he's never even been here before! Classic quotable ad line for the cult hit Trancers back when it played in theaters in 1985. Yeah, Trancers really played the big screen venues back before video ate up the grindhouse theater chains that booked these exploitive little trash movie gems. Charles Band (of Full Moon fame) created his own little movie studio, the now defunct Empire Pictures, which scored a megahit with Stuart Gordon's Re-Animator and, from 1983 until 1988 (or 89), released many a great piece of low rent cinema, Trancers being one the tiny studio's bigger non-Stuart Gordon hits (Ghoulies was the other one). Jack Deth is an Angel City cop tracking down the last few Trancers, people who have become mental zombies enslaved to their psychic leader Whistler, who Deth singed (slang for dispatch revolver style) on one of the 'Rim Worlds'. But it turns out that Whistler is not dead, he has gone 'down the line' to wipe out the current Angel City Council members family lines. Deth has to go back in time, to 1985 Los Angeles, and snag Whistler before he rewrites the future to his power mad liking. Although Trancers has plot holes and paradoxes you can drive several highways through, the script manages some real wit and fun with its premise and character actor Tim Thomerson is obviously having a blast playing Deth. The Full Moon (now Koch Distributing) DVD is just a copy of the Vestron Video laserdisc release, presenting the movie in full frame and offering up some bios and filmographies of the various actors. 40 trailers for most of Band's Full Moon output is offered on the b-side and that makes this disc all the more worth having. Recommended. |
| Rating |   | | Date | December 26, 2002 | | Summary | A very basic reworking of interesting themes | Content
 | This film is often compared with other films, especially Ridley Scott's `Blade Runner', but I'd rather pit it against that movie's source, Philip K. Dick's novel `Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?' In `Trancers', Tim Thomerson plays Jack Deth, a future cop not unlike that book's Rick Deckard in that he hunts down people who are thought to be human but aren't, Deth being (in theory) more able than others to make a distinction between a human and a Trancer. Unlike Dick's Replicants, Trancers are `tranced' humans, but by virtue of this, they are not really human anymore. The man responsible for these manipulations is a power-hungry figure named Whistler, a Trancer himself; the Trancers feel the need to protect their boss, unlike the Nexus-6 Replicants, who rebelled against their `maker' for the limits he had imposed on them. The biggest mistake of `Trancers' is to devote only scant attention to the title-creatures and most of it on Deth, a one-note character with almost none of Deckard's self-interrogations about identity and reality. The time-travel element is marginally interesting, but it's usually played for laughs; meanwhile, the best scenes are those that at least try to tackle the most interesting implications of the material, but there aren't too many of them. My advice to those who considered seeing or buying `Trancers' while wanting more than just easy thrills would be to read Dick's aforementioned novel, which turns some of the ideas on which `Trancers' rests into perceptive philosophical reflections instead of mostly mindless entertainement. |
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