Ozploitation thriller Dangerous Game is a case of style over substance: director Stephen Hopkins (A Nightmare On Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, Lost in Space) achieves some impressive visuals and executes a couple of cool set-pieces, but the film is derivative and often quite ridiculous, the characters repeatedly making really bad decisions solely to further the plot.
The premise for Dangerous Game is reminiscent of several other films: 1984 horror The Initiation, 1986 B-movie Chopping Mall (but without the Killbots), and slasher Hide and Go Shriek, which was also released in '88. A computer nerd (with really bad fashion sense) proves his hacking skill to his friends by opening the security door to a department store. The youngsters enter the place to have a snoop around, unaware that they have been followed by a psychotic cop with a grudge. What follows is part slasher/part survivalist thriller, as the kids must defend themselves against the violent, deranged cop (fortunately, the store has a fairly extensive shotgun department).
Highlights include a vertiginous scene on a ledge and the killer leaping across several display units as they fall like dominoes (although whoever arranged the units like that should lose their job!). Flashy direction (gliding camerawork and dizzying crane shots) and superb cinematography by Peter Levy ensure that the film is great to look at, but with the teens repeatedly splitting up and never taking the opportunity to incapacitate their attacker when the opportunity arises - and only the one death - the film is quite frustrating at times.
4/10.