Crash and Burn (1990 film) explained

Crash and Burn
Director:Charles Band
Cinematography:Mac Ahlberg
Editing:Ted Nicolaou
Music:Richard Band
Studio:Full Moon Entertainment
Distributor:Paramount Home Video
Country:United States
Runtime:85 minutes
Language:English

Crash and Burn is a 1990 American science fiction film directed by Charles Band. It was originally titled Robot Jox 2: Crash and Burn in most European markets, despite not being related to Band's 1990 film Robot Jox.

Plot

Unicom is a powerful organization overseeing most of the world after its economic collapse. They have banned computers and robots in an attempt to ensure "life, liberty, and the pursuit of economic stability." When a Unicom Synth robot infiltrates a southwest TV station and kills the manager, a revolutionary against the gestapo-like corporation, a lowly Unicom delivery man, must help the rest of the station survive through the incoming "thermal storm."

Cast

Reception

The Evansville Courier & Press said it is "saddled with inane dialogue, wooden acting and a plot that is a textbook cliche."[1]

Release

Crash and Burn was officially titled Robot Jox 2 in most European markets at the time of release, but renamed when re-released on DVD. Despite the title, same opening theme, and involvement of Charles Band, and reused cover art, the plots of Robot Jox 2: Crash and Burn and Robot Jox are completely unrelated.

The film was released on DVD by Full Moon in 2000, but was discontinued for copyright reasons. The DVD contained a widescreen print of the film. The film was later released onto DVD again through the Charles Band DVD Collection, released in 2006. The boxset also contains , Doctor Mordrid, and Head of the Family. The film was again released on DVD by Shout! Factory on June 14, 2011, as a double feature DVD with Robot Wars.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Crash and Burn . Evansville Courier & Press . September 30, 1990 . Evansville, Indiana . 9 . Videos.