27 reviews
I was put on to this film by a friend of mine. It's a great flick with a good pace and interesting characters. Admitted some of the acting is a little shameful, but Jan Michael Vincent supplies us with a solid performance as the gruff ass kicking paraplegic with Knives in his wheel chair (how cool is that?). If you enjoyed the Warriors than this is definitely worth a watch.
But why is this not on DVD? Have searched high and low and can't find it anywhere.
Had to watch in poor VHS quality with German subs which was a little annoying, but did not detract from my enjoyment of the film.
But why is this not on DVD? Have searched high and low and can't find it anywhere.
Had to watch in poor VHS quality with German subs which was a little annoying, but did not detract from my enjoyment of the film.
- TheDarkMutt
- Dec 15, 2009
- Permalink
A nice assortment of characters, are terrorized by a gang called the "Vampires", while desperately trying to escape from a "project" high rise. The strength of this film is having very sympathetic heroes, Gary Frank, and Ray Parker Jr., interacting with likable tenants, including Jan Michael Vincent playing a whacked Vietnam Vet. The "Vampire"gang are all generic, unmemorable, minority thugs, with the notable exception of "The Count". The movie is both claustrophobic, and a real stretch of realism, but is nevertheless entertaining. Considering the limited budget, "Enemy Territory" is a surprisingly good film..... - MERK
- merklekranz
- Jan 9, 2012
- Permalink
This was one of those films I constantly saw on the video previews of ex-rentals and each time I saw it pop up my hunger only grew to watch it. Produced by Charles Band's Empire pictures, "Enemy Territory" was a nice surprise (strangely not on DVD yet) and truly a sock 'em urban action survival romp that is compulsively brutal, raw and relentless in its tightly constructed surges.
Barry (Gary Frank) a struggling insurance salesman heads out to a rundown complex building the Lincoln Towers late one evening for a client (Frances Foster) to sign some very important papers for his company and especially for himself. However he gets caught in an altercation which sees him fighting for his life against a savage gang called the vampires, who rule the building at night. Also getting involved is Will (Ray Parker, Jr) a telephone repairman who comes to his aid. It's going to be one long night for the pair, as they try seeking help from the buildings tenants or it would be their blood for the vampires. They hunt at night for blood.
A low-budget, but well-pulled off enterprise by director Peter Manoogian. He creates a gritty edge from its surroundings (plenty of taut corridor running), where the pacing is fast, the tension is on boil and the claustrophobic build-up has you biting your finger nails. A simple-minded script keeps it tough, especially with its biting wit and a bit of social commentary lingers on urban decay. Still just take it as caught in the wrong place, at the wrong time situation. Coming to the forefront is the potent performances by the cast. Gary Frank is fittingly good in his meek portrayal and Ray Parker, Jr is affably brought across. Their chemistry simply crackles. The tremendous standout would be aggressively hammy and towering Tony Todd as the count, the leader of the gang. His speeches are pure poetry and he eats it up. A spunky Stacey Dash adds plenty of kick to her role and also Frances Foster. Jan-Michael Vincent would appear in a small part as a grizzled, resentful paraplegic Vietnam veteran. In the background is a pounding soundtrack.
Barry (Gary Frank) a struggling insurance salesman heads out to a rundown complex building the Lincoln Towers late one evening for a client (Frances Foster) to sign some very important papers for his company and especially for himself. However he gets caught in an altercation which sees him fighting for his life against a savage gang called the vampires, who rule the building at night. Also getting involved is Will (Ray Parker, Jr) a telephone repairman who comes to his aid. It's going to be one long night for the pair, as they try seeking help from the buildings tenants or it would be their blood for the vampires. They hunt at night for blood.
A low-budget, but well-pulled off enterprise by director Peter Manoogian. He creates a gritty edge from its surroundings (plenty of taut corridor running), where the pacing is fast, the tension is on boil and the claustrophobic build-up has you biting your finger nails. A simple-minded script keeps it tough, especially with its biting wit and a bit of social commentary lingers on urban decay. Still just take it as caught in the wrong place, at the wrong time situation. Coming to the forefront is the potent performances by the cast. Gary Frank is fittingly good in his meek portrayal and Ray Parker, Jr is affably brought across. Their chemistry simply crackles. The tremendous standout would be aggressively hammy and towering Tony Todd as the count, the leader of the gang. His speeches are pure poetry and he eats it up. A spunky Stacey Dash adds plenty of kick to her role and also Frances Foster. Jan-Michael Vincent would appear in a small part as a grizzled, resentful paraplegic Vietnam veteran. In the background is a pounding soundtrack.
- lost-in-limbo
- Jun 25, 2010
- Permalink
New York has never looked so good! This is a gritty thriller set in a tower block, where an unfortunate insurance salesman finds himself trapped on the top floor in a building controlled by the local gang called the Vampires. The Vampires are out for blood after the salesman unwittingly insults one of the gangs younger members on his way to sign a deal which should earn him a nice commission. Luckily he gets some help along the way by none other than Ray Parker Junior, and together with some friendlier residents of the block, they try to escape certain death. Quite a tense movie with a cool soundtrack and a nice score. But the best thing is Tony Todd (pre - Candyman) as the demented evil leader of the Vampires and his sidekick - Psycho! I own a copy of this on VHS Pal and think it,s well worth watching if this sort of thing is your cup of tea.
- davethorne700
- Aug 22, 2002
- Permalink
This flick is a good representative of the 80's underrated B-movies, that gets you not by the quality, but specially by the lack of it. The best thing is when a movie does not take itself seriously, the essence of a nice low-budget production. The acting is poor and over the top, the surroundings are clearly used from another pictures done before, very goofy lines and involuntary humor. And you gotta love it! All these are present here, helped by the reverse Midas touch of the prolific producer Charles Band, notorious for his Roger Corman wannabe personality, that guarantees the fun for a penny. In the story, a phone company worker (Ray Parker Jr., whose sole glory was the making of the hit song "Ghostbusters", in his acting debut) is caught up in the middle of a crisis with a violent street gang called the Vampires, that control a project building where a rundown insurance salesman played by Gary Frank stepped on the wrong toe by touching a gang member after dark; the Vampires leader, The Count (Tony Todd), wants blood to make amends and the duo must fight for their lives until the sun comes up, with the helping hand of some courageous inhabitants. This suspense is OK, the situations are OK, I am OK and you are OK. Be OK by watching this OK movie. You'll feel just OK after.
- ricardovs27
- May 18, 2006
- Permalink
- tarbosh22000
- Jul 27, 2014
- Permalink
- tenthousandtattoos
- Apr 24, 2007
- Permalink
Enemy Territory was a pretty good movie & better than I expected it to be.I watched it from start to finish on the edge of my seat, wondering if & how Ray Parker Jr. (Yes, that Ray Parker Jr.) & the insurance salesman would make it out of the projects alive.Speaking of Ray Parker Jr., I didn't realize he was in the movie until I saw it on IMDb.Kadeem Hardison was in it as well as A-Train.A young Tony Todd was most evil as the leader of The Vampires & Jan-Michael Vincent was great as the Vietnam vet who turned his apartment into a bunker & the only tenant The Vampires were scared of because he was the only 1 who would shoot back. (Did Jan-Michael Vincent's character remind anybody else of Rowdy Roddy Piper or was it just me?) Even though it did keep me on the edge of my seat the entire time & was better than I expected, Enemy Territory isn't a movie I'd watch that often but I would watch it again.It had my attention while it was on but after it was over, I was like...... I'd recommend anybody & everybody go see it though.It's most definitely worth watching, at least once
- dukeakasmudge
- Feb 19, 2017
- Permalink
Though made in 1987, 'Enemy Territory' most resembles a drive-in exploitation movie from the seventies. Silly script, over-acting by all concerned, non-stop action and a dated 'urban' soundtrack all mean one thing - FUN!!! I've seen this countless times now, but enjoy it at every viewing. Pretty hard to find (and still no DVD release) but worth it for those seeking a 'drive-in' fix......8/10
- woolleysheep2000
- Apr 12, 2003
- Permalink
A late 80's action thriller that has a yuppie insurance salesman visiting a housing project apartment building in New York at night. While in the building to collect a premium he has a mishap with a gang member from a group that all themselves The Vampires. This sets off a war between the gang and the tenants in a place the police won't go.
This flick was awesome. The Vampire gang was led by a young, skinny Tony Todd which he did just after Platoon. I met Tony Todd a couple years ago and meant to ask him if he had this on DVD because he did tell me he collects DVDs and I've never seen an official release of this one yet.
As well as Tony Todd you have Ray Parker Jr. helping the insurance guy get out of the apartment alive and playing a Vietnam vet in a wheelchair was Jan-Michael Vincent kicking ass. The film reminded me of Tenement: Game of Survival (1985) which the writer probably watched with elements of Assault On Precinct 13. The tension just keeps building in this one. An enjoyable film that's not too heavy.
This flick was awesome. The Vampire gang was led by a young, skinny Tony Todd which he did just after Platoon. I met Tony Todd a couple years ago and meant to ask him if he had this on DVD because he did tell me he collects DVDs and I've never seen an official release of this one yet.
As well as Tony Todd you have Ray Parker Jr. helping the insurance guy get out of the apartment alive and playing a Vietnam vet in a wheelchair was Jan-Michael Vincent kicking ass. The film reminded me of Tenement: Game of Survival (1985) which the writer probably watched with elements of Assault On Precinct 13. The tension just keeps building in this one. An enjoyable film that's not too heavy.
- shawnblackman
- Sep 28, 2016
- Permalink
I found this flick at a convention for less than 1 euro on "The Company Motion Pictures" label. The bar-code started with 87 so I knew it was a Dutch label. They brought out some hard to get titles on DVD but they were just some VHS rips with unremovable subs of course. Nevertheless, I have seen this DVD going up to 30£ on ebay. The other strange part of this movie is that it was made by a director, Peter Manoogian, not well known but he was second unit director on a lot of horror flicks (The Slayer and Galaxy Of Terror) so he surely know his stuff. Another strange thing is that this is still OOP but contain some actors that had fame in 1987. Ray Parker Jr. was known for Ghostbusters (1984), Gary Frank for a lot of roles in series of the 80's, Jan-Michael Vincent for his lead role in the Airwolf series (1984) and Tony Todd is notable here in one of his first roles just before breaking through as a horror icon best known for The Candyman (1992) franchise. The flick itself never bored me, you just keep watching how they will survive the attack of the Vampire gang. It's also especially worth looking at in the beginning for the atmosphere of NY. I was there around that time and saw 42nd at the end of its glory, I even stayed at a hotel just between the grindhouses. Years later (90's) I went back, everything was gone. Anyway, it's low budget, look at the storyline, look at shadows from crew, look after 5 minutes into the film and see the microphone appearing in-camera. It happens a few times, the location is for almost 85 minutes the same, so it surely get's that drive-in feeling. It doesn't look like a flick from the end of the 80's. The effects are cheap, it's normal that it didn't got a proper release but still, worth watching for exploitation, grindhouse fans, if you can find it...
Just bought this on video to see Jan Michael Vincent's part. What a fun movie this was! Urban decay as literal nightmare - huge ghetto apartment, graffiti everywhere, people out to kill you, gangs running rampant - this movie has it all! It captures 'scary' New York very well. I guess you might call it soft-core Blax-sploitation. The music is 80's, but the sheer adrenaline this movie creates still registers today. Jan Michael Vincent has one of the best cameos you will ever see in a movie! He plays 'Parker', a whacked out, bubba-Vietnam vet in a wheelchair (still handsome, but crazed!) who tries to help a remarkably decent-acting Ray Parker Jr. (Yes, the very same Ghostbusters singer in his first acting role) and his white companion. JMV gives an electrifying performance! One wishes he could have had more screen time - but it's well worth seeing his brilliant 10 minutes! Tony Todd (yes, the "Candyman" himself!) is also great as the "Vampire" gang leader in this.
- robespierre9
- Nov 17, 2008
- Permalink
Enemy territory is a fantastic 80s urban Thriller i love this film, this has that exciting & creepy atmosphere & tone like Assault on precinct 13 (1976) & alot of that 80s punk gangs feel that you get in the Death wish films & many others.This little survival film is about a really bad neighbourhood somewhere in new York City that has a really run down tenement building that is the dark hunting ground of a gang of black thugs called the Vampires who have a crazy leader played by the Awesome TONY TODD!!! & on a late Friday evening i believe or Saturday evening? Anyway IT'S getting late & nearly dark & an insurance salesman played really well by GARY FRANK has to go into the building to make a quick sale-a quick signing & back out but things go very wrong & very serious & he ends up trapped in the big scary building with the Vampires gang hunting him. A great little B-movie fun & exciting Thriller with a vety gritty look & creepy high rise building & it works perfectly with tense scenes & some other cool characters who happen to be in the building or live there such as will (RAY PARKER JR ) who is a good guy & wants to help get Barry out of the building alive!!! Also small roles for other characters like JAN MICHAEL VINCENT'S ex Vietnam nut who loves guns & STACEY DASH (Clueless) who also wants to help. ENEMY TERRITORY is great exciting fun with an AWESOME cast & an AWESOME location to for an urban survival Thriller to be set in. This is my DIE HARD set in a big building & came out a year before!!! This is better & more fun.
- lukem-52760
- Jul 24, 2018
- Permalink
- BandSAboutMovies
- Aug 30, 2023
- Permalink
I saw this movie a looooooooooooong time ago. At that time I didn't like it. But I decided to try it again to see whether I like it better now. I think that when you re-watch a movie after a few years the possibility is there that you will like it even more or hate it even more. The more movies you watch the more you broaden your horizon and the more your opinion on movies changes. Well, after re-watching this movie my conclusion was "Oh my god, this is great stuff". And it is. It's very 80ies and has a lot of suspense. You are into it very fast and then it's a long ride till the end. Just awesome.
A merciless street gang called the Vampires and led by "Candyman" himself Tony Todd is terrorizing the tenants inhabiting the Lincoln Towers.An insurance salesman Gary Frank and a telephone repairman Ray Davis Jr. are trying to survive the night of terror and destroy evil gang."Enemy Territory" by Peter Manoogian of "Demonic Toys" and "Seedpeople" fame is a cheesy action thriller which suddenly disappeared into obscurity.It's pretty fun and entertaining flick with plenty of violence and some cult one-liners.It was filmed in lower Manhattan and briefly in Los Angeles.If you are into cheesy Empire/Full Moon horror movies check out this fairly rare and forgotten urban survival film.7 black gangs out of 10.
- HumanoidOfFlesh
- Aug 22, 2012
- Permalink
You really don't see a movie like this for the performances. It's all for the action. Yes this movie is somewhat racist, but it also says a lot about life along the way, how we treat people according to race and environment, how we view that 'Nam-rattled vet in a wheelchair down the hall who resembles a drugged out Jan-Michael Vincent. Seriously, this film could've been a minor classic with a stronger cast, sort of one of those uncompromising horror epics as LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT and HILLS HAVE EYES. Why, if Wes Craven had made this instead of HILLS HAVE EYES 2, DEADLY FRIEND, SHOCKER, PEOPLE UNDER THE STAIRS, and VAMPIRE IN BROOKLYN, he wouldn't have had to wait 12 years between the original NIGHTMARE ON ELM ST and SCREAM to once again be heralded a genius of the thinking man's horror cinema. A person with his wit, intelligence and genuine talent behind the camera could've made this one something that transcended the action/horror/ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13-type genre. As it stands though, it's a decent night out in exploitation cinema as long as you give the themes some good thought afterwards.
According my files I had watched this movie in 1991, however I'd forgot the title and leading casting, recently after an exhaustive research at internet turned out useless, since I give up, suddenly yesterday looking old movies at Youtube "Territory Enemy" draw my attention and watching the early scenes, the bull's eye!! That is, the long searching is over.
During the eighties New York neighborhoods had a spreading of gangs, Spanish, punks and Blacks and so on, each one at your space, a young insurance salesman Barry (Gary Frank) in dire straits by lowest sales is called by his Boss by collect a signature of an retired teacher Elva Briggs (Francis Foster) at bad area on Lincoln Towers, needing money from commission he agreed, the problem is the night is near and no one dares stay there on the night, due the building where Elva lives is ruled by menacing gang self-called The Vampires lead by the odd and bleak Count (Tony Todd).
Straight off the naïve Barry asking info over Elva's apartment he touches in shoulder of an underage teenager, that replays with harsh words claiming been part of the Vampire's gang, an old security guard appears and warns the teenager to stop the offences, also Barry to be there nearby the night, has been a white guy, he escort Barry at Elva apartment and waiting for his safe returning.
Nonetheless the Vampire gang is already warning about the "Ghost" as they refer a white man at their domains at such time and worst he has been threatened to one of them, then it trigger a warfare, the first victim is the security guard, then sudden appears Will (Ray Parker Jr.) just visiting an easy lady, hearing the riot he aiding Barry and get refuge at Elsa's apartment for a while that advises them to escape through the window toward two floor below, what a mess.
Reaching there they found the gorgeous Elsa's granddaughter Toni Briggs (Stacy Dash) that warning them over a former crippled soldier Parker (Jan-Michael Vincent) who is the only man whereof the Vampires afraid, they looking for him at his bunker apartment, he living there at wheelchair surround by heavy guns, after that reaches the Vampires claiming the ghost.
This urban nightmare "Enemy Territory" is a spin-off as The Warriors, Assault of Precinct 13, Game of Survival just named a few, highly underrated and as far I know never was release officially anywhere, was the Stacy Dash debut a beautiful young girl, a solid performance of Tony Todd, Jan-Michael Vincent, still Gary Frank got lost along the way, hope someday it came out on DVD.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 1991 / How many: 3 / Source: TV-Youtube / Rating: 7.5.
During the eighties New York neighborhoods had a spreading of gangs, Spanish, punks and Blacks and so on, each one at your space, a young insurance salesman Barry (Gary Frank) in dire straits by lowest sales is called by his Boss by collect a signature of an retired teacher Elva Briggs (Francis Foster) at bad area on Lincoln Towers, needing money from commission he agreed, the problem is the night is near and no one dares stay there on the night, due the building where Elva lives is ruled by menacing gang self-called The Vampires lead by the odd and bleak Count (Tony Todd).
Straight off the naïve Barry asking info over Elva's apartment he touches in shoulder of an underage teenager, that replays with harsh words claiming been part of the Vampire's gang, an old security guard appears and warns the teenager to stop the offences, also Barry to be there nearby the night, has been a white guy, he escort Barry at Elva apartment and waiting for his safe returning.
Nonetheless the Vampire gang is already warning about the "Ghost" as they refer a white man at their domains at such time and worst he has been threatened to one of them, then it trigger a warfare, the first victim is the security guard, then sudden appears Will (Ray Parker Jr.) just visiting an easy lady, hearing the riot he aiding Barry and get refuge at Elsa's apartment for a while that advises them to escape through the window toward two floor below, what a mess.
Reaching there they found the gorgeous Elsa's granddaughter Toni Briggs (Stacy Dash) that warning them over a former crippled soldier Parker (Jan-Michael Vincent) who is the only man whereof the Vampires afraid, they looking for him at his bunker apartment, he living there at wheelchair surround by heavy guns, after that reaches the Vampires claiming the ghost.
This urban nightmare "Enemy Territory" is a spin-off as The Warriors, Assault of Precinct 13, Game of Survival just named a few, highly underrated and as far I know never was release officially anywhere, was the Stacy Dash debut a beautiful young girl, a solid performance of Tony Todd, Jan-Michael Vincent, still Gary Frank got lost along the way, hope someday it came out on DVD.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 1991 / How many: 3 / Source: TV-Youtube / Rating: 7.5.
- elo-equipamentos
- May 7, 2023
- Permalink
- Woodyanders
- Jan 11, 2007
- Permalink
This movie, i must have watched it 40 times...but not in the last 10 years, would love to watch and see if it still scares me, it invoked alot of emotion in me as a child...racism....hatred...violence...all wrapped up into one big burrito is what you have here...i loved this movie, and it was my first exposure to a VERY underrated actor, Tony Todd...although reaching mimimal success as candyman...and recently as a 2 bit part of a mortician in final destination...he is very good onstage with the creepy image, needs to be his own villain!!! wtg tony 10:10
- mackdaddyspliffs
- Mar 19, 2003
- Permalink
Insurance salesman Barry (Gary Frank) visits an urban ghetto to sell insurance to a client and has a run in with a young member of a vicious street gang called the Vampires. This gang runs the district. Soon their leader, aptly named 'The Count' (Tony Todd) hears about this and wants Barry dead. Barry is trapped in the apartment building with no way out; we soon see the murder of an elderly cop who tries to protect Barry so we know the gang mean business. Barry teams up with Ray Parker Jnr and they also enlist the help of the only man the gang supposedly fears, the wheelchair bound Parker, a Vietnam War veteran, (played by Jan-Michael Vincent). However they are totally outnumbered. The vampires are after blood.
The film is fast paced and entertaining but does has strong violence and racism in as well so be warned. Sadly this film is hard to find and seems to have disappeared since the VHS days. Ray Parker Jnr is first class and you question why he never became a mega star. Tony Todd is a great presence as always and it's sad that Candy man was the height of his career, he deserved better. He does seem to enjoy himself in the role as the count. Jan-Michael Vincent completes a great cast. Also a great music soundtrack from the Boogie boys an American hip hop band group from New York, where this film was shot. The band sadly spilt up a year after this film was made.
Watch out for the clever ending; note the gang are called Vampires when you look for this. This film is worth the effort to hunt down even if it's only an old VHS you can find. Deserves a DVD release.
The film is fast paced and entertaining but does has strong violence and racism in as well so be warned. Sadly this film is hard to find and seems to have disappeared since the VHS days. Ray Parker Jnr is first class and you question why he never became a mega star. Tony Todd is a great presence as always and it's sad that Candy man was the height of his career, he deserved better. He does seem to enjoy himself in the role as the count. Jan-Michael Vincent completes a great cast. Also a great music soundtrack from the Boogie boys an American hip hop band group from New York, where this film was shot. The band sadly spilt up a year after this film was made.
Watch out for the clever ending; note the gang are called Vampires when you look for this. This film is worth the effort to hunt down even if it's only an old VHS you can find. Deserves a DVD release.
- Radish4ever
- May 3, 2013
- Permalink
When the sun goes down and the moon shines brightly, the tenants inhabiting the Lincoln Towers tremble in fear...terrified of an evil, omnipotent presence, a merciless street gang calling themselves the "Vampires." The Vampires are lead by none other than Tony Todd as the Count! As the King of these apartments, he strikes fear into the hearts of his innocent prey...
Gary Frank is an insurance salesman, an ordinary, blue collared John Doe. Ray Parker Jr.mis a telephone repairman. The two share absolutely nothing in common except for the necessity of survival. Caught in the warfare of the Vampires' vicious nightly activities of chaos and total fanatical frenzy, the two must align together if their chances of surviving the Vampires' ordeal is at all, to say the least, tenuous. The hunted duo's lives are in jeopardy. Their only essence to triumph over adversity is a motley of courageous souls including a tough elderly woman, her beautiful teenage granddaughter, Toni (Stacey Dash), and a crippled, psychopathic Vietnam veteran (Jan-Michael Vincent. This Vietnam vet may very well serve as much of a hostile threat rather than an ally to both Frank and Ray Jr. The clash between good and evil continues in a vortex of anxiety and perturbation until the last survivors of both sides meet in a final confrontation...
Enemy Territory is a creepy urban thriller with satisfactory performances and a fair amount of tension and uneasiness. Gary Frank enunciates a couple of sly one-liners. Ray Parker Jr. does little but sneer at Frank's naivete of the whole distressing situation the two are experiencing. The two also manage to save each other's rear ends a few times from the aggression of the innumerable Vampire gang members. Tony Todd is a scream as the leader of the hardened Vampires. He conveys a bad-to-the-bone antagonist who shows everyone who is the boss of the territory... Tony Todd arrogantly proclaims himself as the emperor of his territory, and he does a great job playing a demonic guy on the edge. Jan-Michael Vincent gives a nutty performance as an insane Vietnam veteran who's screws are not tightened on properly.
This low budget formula offers a few violent action scenes and lots of blood. Don't watch this movie on a full stomach! I also observed how offensively mean-spirited and racist this movie was at times.
Enemy Territory is not bad, but not particularly memorable. The cast is good, the violence is shrill, and the apprehension pierces one's nerves. Still, you can't help but to feel a sour taste in your mouth once this film is finished. This is due to the rough characteristics protruding throughout the duration of this film. An interesting and unique journey into the depths of "Enemy Territory!"
RATING: ** out of ****.
Gary Frank is an insurance salesman, an ordinary, blue collared John Doe. Ray Parker Jr.mis a telephone repairman. The two share absolutely nothing in common except for the necessity of survival. Caught in the warfare of the Vampires' vicious nightly activities of chaos and total fanatical frenzy, the two must align together if their chances of surviving the Vampires' ordeal is at all, to say the least, tenuous. The hunted duo's lives are in jeopardy. Their only essence to triumph over adversity is a motley of courageous souls including a tough elderly woman, her beautiful teenage granddaughter, Toni (Stacey Dash), and a crippled, psychopathic Vietnam veteran (Jan-Michael Vincent. This Vietnam vet may very well serve as much of a hostile threat rather than an ally to both Frank and Ray Jr. The clash between good and evil continues in a vortex of anxiety and perturbation until the last survivors of both sides meet in a final confrontation...
Enemy Territory is a creepy urban thriller with satisfactory performances and a fair amount of tension and uneasiness. Gary Frank enunciates a couple of sly one-liners. Ray Parker Jr. does little but sneer at Frank's naivete of the whole distressing situation the two are experiencing. The two also manage to save each other's rear ends a few times from the aggression of the innumerable Vampire gang members. Tony Todd is a scream as the leader of the hardened Vampires. He conveys a bad-to-the-bone antagonist who shows everyone who is the boss of the territory... Tony Todd arrogantly proclaims himself as the emperor of his territory, and he does a great job playing a demonic guy on the edge. Jan-Michael Vincent gives a nutty performance as an insane Vietnam veteran who's screws are not tightened on properly.
This low budget formula offers a few violent action scenes and lots of blood. Don't watch this movie on a full stomach! I also observed how offensively mean-spirited and racist this movie was at times.
Enemy Territory is not bad, but not particularly memorable. The cast is good, the violence is shrill, and the apprehension pierces one's nerves. Still, you can't help but to feel a sour taste in your mouth once this film is finished. This is due to the rough characteristics protruding throughout the duration of this film. An interesting and unique journey into the depths of "Enemy Territory!"
RATING: ** out of ****.
A cheap ex rental video 30 plus years ago leads to a night of terror for a ten year old, like the Warriors before it. The feeling of the trap tightening and luck running out. this could have found a cult following like the warriors. If had made a return on dvd would love to see a cleaned up version with improved sound and picture for dvd. Watching all these years later still great straight movie no flashbacks just stay with the characters from start to finish Or Top floor to basement. On the same weekend in 1992 I watched two movies. one would go on to have a cult following. The other remains lost on VHS . The warriors and Enemy territory both follow a long night where sunrise could bring survival both have that cat and mouse feel catch or survivor style something about both films felt real as a child. This sits you on the edge of your seat while enjoying the movie you nearly want it to end for the relief of the stars finally hopefully reaching safety . Very different stories but if a fan of the style of the warriors this could be for you. Low production high intensity.
- paudieconnolly
- Jan 30, 2021
- Permalink
Shot on location in NY back when it was still NY & not a Disneyfied dumpster fire for trendy tourists & homegrown hipsters to flock to, "Enemy Territory" captures a moment in time when NY was on the cusp of gentrification. Since the film centres on a crumbling, crime ridden & graffiti covered tenement, it's easy to imagine that many viewers from the current generation will look down upon the NY that was as a hellish place in dire need of the makeover it would recieve in the early 21st century. But for those who lived it through the 80's & 90's, a film like "Enemy Territory" is more likely to strike a nostalgic chord...
...The script itself doesn't really have much of a story, if any. But that isn't really the point of the film. "Enemy Territory" is a pure chase film of the kind which would continue into the 90's with the cult classic, "Judgement Night". But while that film was played deadly serious, "Enemy Territory" takes a more humourous approach. To call the film an Action/Comedy would be inaccurate since the Comedic aspect does not detract from the seriousness of the situation. The overall tone is simply lighter than the common Thriller despite the film being fairly violent on a regular basis. But even so it's never gratuitous...
...Caught up in the carnage is a W. A. S. P-ish insurance saleman who just so happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. His first encounter with an all-black street gang leads to a fatality & he's soon fleeing the gang until he has no choice, but to fight back. Aided by singer Ray "Ghostbusters" Parker jr (making his acting debut), "Enemy Territory" has some Buddy Movie moments, but is not exactly comparable to the same year's "Lethal Weapon". Our two protagonists are soon (albeit briefly) joined by a third in the form of the late Jan Michael Vincent playing a wheelchair bound & to be honest bigoted Vitenam veteran. It's eerily prophetic to see Vincent spouting venomous slurs whilst confined to a chair as the man himself would end up in one toward the end of his life & would become more known for his questionable remarks than his legacy in television & film. Rounding out the cast we have a very young Tony "Candyman" Todd playing the sadistic gang leader in a film stealing turn...
..."Enemy Territory" is well worth seeing out if you enjoy gangland set Thrillers or just NY cinema in general. The film strikes a perfect balance of hi-octane action & low budget amusement. The cast are all game, throwing themselves into their roles & the situation based script. Just why the film has been ignored for decades is baffling considering how many other & less deserving b-movies of yesteryear are being rediscovered today. It's the kind of film that you'll be hard pressed to find anyone who has seen it yet you'll also be hard pressed to find someone who's seen it that doesn't like it!
S. S. S.
...The script itself doesn't really have much of a story, if any. But that isn't really the point of the film. "Enemy Territory" is a pure chase film of the kind which would continue into the 90's with the cult classic, "Judgement Night". But while that film was played deadly serious, "Enemy Territory" takes a more humourous approach. To call the film an Action/Comedy would be inaccurate since the Comedic aspect does not detract from the seriousness of the situation. The overall tone is simply lighter than the common Thriller despite the film being fairly violent on a regular basis. But even so it's never gratuitous...
...Caught up in the carnage is a W. A. S. P-ish insurance saleman who just so happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. His first encounter with an all-black street gang leads to a fatality & he's soon fleeing the gang until he has no choice, but to fight back. Aided by singer Ray "Ghostbusters" Parker jr (making his acting debut), "Enemy Territory" has some Buddy Movie moments, but is not exactly comparable to the same year's "Lethal Weapon". Our two protagonists are soon (albeit briefly) joined by a third in the form of the late Jan Michael Vincent playing a wheelchair bound & to be honest bigoted Vitenam veteran. It's eerily prophetic to see Vincent spouting venomous slurs whilst confined to a chair as the man himself would end up in one toward the end of his life & would become more known for his questionable remarks than his legacy in television & film. Rounding out the cast we have a very young Tony "Candyman" Todd playing the sadistic gang leader in a film stealing turn...
..."Enemy Territory" is well worth seeing out if you enjoy gangland set Thrillers or just NY cinema in general. The film strikes a perfect balance of hi-octane action & low budget amusement. The cast are all game, throwing themselves into their roles & the situation based script. Just why the film has been ignored for decades is baffling considering how many other & less deserving b-movies of yesteryear are being rediscovered today. It's the kind of film that you'll be hard pressed to find anyone who has seen it yet you'll also be hard pressed to find someone who's seen it that doesn't like it!
S. S. S.
The Vampires are certainly an underrated gang, you don't want to mess with. ET is one of those 87 treasures, you never get sick of watching because of how entertaining and guiltily engrossing it is. The premise is fresh. One guy is in wrong place at wrong time, well wrong time, all the time. He shouldn't of been there. Frank, great to see in the lead is an insurance salesman, who has to make one last call, regrettably in the projects. We know when he gets back to his car, it isn't gonna be the same as how he left it. The catalyst here was that Frank tapped a black kid gangster on the shoulder to ask him where his client was. This is enough to bring down the hell that ensues, where shortly after, on Frank's exit, the black kid is shot, and the rest of the gang that control these tenements want blood. It's a frightening situation and atmosphere, which has you asking many times before, "How could you live here?" Frank nicknamed The Ghost by the gang, becomes trapped in the building. burning with hate. Bring on Ray Parker Jnr- The Blood Traitor as named by our Vamps, in not a half bad performance, who teams up with Frank, not the best fighting duo, one must admit. These two are the only hope of getting out alive. Jan Michael Vincent really stuck out here as a crippled resentful vet (aren't they all), another suffering tenant, ready and armed, with mettle, who hasn't given up the fight. Enemy Territory really works where in the space of it's 85 minutes, we undermine the terrifying ambiance the movie projects. To carry a movie, only riding on this premise successfully for this duration, and make it continually exciting is impressive. ET is infectiously entertaining, a nifty, cute and cool little movie, gangland style. Track it down if you haven't seen it, if also watching for Ray Parker Jnr's only performance.
- videorama-759-859391
- Jan 24, 2015
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