Crazy Six | |
Director: | Albert Pyun |
Producer: | Tom Karnowski Gary Schmoeller |
Starring: | Rob Lowe Mario Van Peebles Ice-T Burt Reynolds |
Music: | Anthony Riparetti |
Cinematography: | George Mooradian |
Editing: | Natasha Gjurokovic |
Distributor: | Sterling Entertainment Group (US) |
Runtime: | 94 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Crazy Six is a 1998 American gangster film directed by Albert Pyun and starring Rob Lowe, Mario Van Peebles, Ice-T, Ivana Miličević and Burt Reynolds. It was released direct-to-video in the United States on July 29, 1998.
A decade after the fall of communism, a section of Eastern Europe known as "Crimeland" becomes a trade route for drugs and weapons. Billie "Crazy Six" and his friends rob a plutonium deal involving Raul in order to obtain money for their drug habits with the aid of "Dirty" Mao, who cheats them out of the money in the end. Raul is given 48 hours by his boss to recover the goods and begins by hunting them down at a local club, injuring the singer Anna and killing Andrew's girlfriend Viyana.
The American detective Dakota interviews Anna, leading him to Billie. Anna is kidnapped by Raul's men and forced to smoke crack. Billie and Andrew rob "Dirty" Mao's hideout and recover the money. Dakota follows them to the exchange with Raul, but so does "Dirty" Mao. After a gunfight between Dakota and Raul's men, "Dirty" Mao kills Raul and attempts to frame Billie for it but is shot and killed by Dakota.
In the end, Dakota adopts "Dirty" Mao's dog, Anna returns to singing, and Billie gets clean.
The screenplay originally took place in San Francisco, but was rewritten after the production moved to Slovakia[1] to save money. Crazy Six was the only feature film written by Galen Yuen, a former gang member-turned-character actor.[2] On the podcast Magnificent Jerk, Yuen's niece and Washington Post reporter Maya Lin Sugarman attests that the film was at least partially autobiographical.[3]
The film was released direct-to-video in the United States on July 28, 1998.
Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club wrote that "Lowe is predictably awful" yet "despite Lowe's performance, Crazy Six is palatable, with Pyun giving the film an appropriately seedy aura of glamorous decay."[4]