TRANCERS II aka FUTURE COP II; TRANCERS II: THE RETURN OF JACK DETH
USA. 1991. Director/Producer - Charles Band, Screenplay - Jackson Barr, Story - Band & Barr, Photography - Adolfo Bartoli, Music - Phil Davies & Mark Ryder, Special Effects - Players Special Effects (Supervisor - Kevin McCarthy), Makeup Effects - Palah Sandling, Production Design - Kathleen Coates. Production Company - Full Moon Entertainment. Tim Thomerson (Jack Deth), Megan Ward (Alice Stillwell), Helen Hunt (Lena Deth), Alyson Croft (McNulty), Biff Manard (Hap Ashby), Richard Lynch (E.D. Wardo/Edward Whistler), Martine Beswicke (Nurse Trotter), Jeffrey Combs (Dr Pyle), Sonny Carl Davis (Rabbit), Art La Fleur (Captain McNulty), Telma Hopkins (Commander Raines)
Plot: Captain McNulty is sent back to the present to bring Jack Deth back to the future. But Deth, living in the body of his ancestor, has married in the present and is unwilling to return. Deth's wife from the future, Alice Stillwell, has also been sent back to retrieve him but been locked in an asylum. They are reunited, much to the consternation of Lena, Deth's wife in the present. But Deth discovers Alice has been sent back from a point just prior to her being killed and all that waits her upon her return is death. Meanwhile Whistler's brother, in the guise of the asylum doctor, has been conducting experiments to turn the homeless into trancers.
Charles Band's `Trancers' aka `Futurecop' (1985) was an entertaining crossbreed of time travel story and film noir, one that made a virtue out of its low budget. As is wont with almost every film that Band and his father Albert produce under either their Empire, Full Moon or Moonbeam production labels, it was inevitably spun out into a series, producing four sequels of which this was the first. The later sequels became fairly silly, sending Deth into fantasy worlds and the like, but this one proves a modest and competent enough effort. It has a plot that is initially so burdened with exposition that it becomes almost impossible to follow. Nevertheless the middle of the film sets up an intriguing temporal dilemma with Deth reunited with his dead wife and the knowledge that to send her back to their own time will be to send her back to face her death which is conducted a degree of bathos that the first film never achieved. The rest is fairly standard B-budget sf escapades generally following in the footsteps of the first film. Tim Thomerson gives another highly amusing performance as Deth. He is quite capably supported by Helen Hunt (who must surely regard the `Trancers' films as an embarrassment now that she has graduated to Academy and Emmy Award-winning actress) and Megan Ward, a worthwhile actress surely due more recognition, who has been a find of the Band's in films like this, `Crash and Burn' (1990) and `Arcade' (1992).
Copyright 1998 Richard Scheib
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