Stone Cold Dead

Stone Cold Dead is a 1979 Canadian-Americam neo noir crime film directed by George Mendeluk and starring Richard Crenna and Paul Williams.[1]

Stone Cold Dead
Directed byGeorge Mendeluk
Produced by
  • George Mendeluk
  • John Ryan
Written byGeorge Mendeluk
Based onThe Sin Sniper
by Hugh Garner
Starring
Music byPaul Zaza
Guidonna Lee
Alexis Radlin
CinematographyDennis Miller
Edited byMartin Pepler
Production
company
Canadian Film Development Corporation
Ko-Zak Productions
Distributed byDimension Pictures
Release date
  • September 14, 1979 (1979-09-14) (Toronto)
  • March 5, 1980 (1980-03-05) (United States)
Running time
108 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Premise

A Toronto detective (Richard Crenna) searches for a serial killer who shoots prostitutes. The detective is also determined to arrest the pushy pimps and a few undercover cops get killed as they try to infiltrate the hooker trade.

Cast

Production

Crenna said he was drawn to the film partly because his character survives the events of the plot, something that few of his characters had done recently.[2] Mendeluk used both actresses and real-life Toronto prostitutes during filming.[3] Shooting took place during November and December 1978 in Toronto,[4] and production ended in February 1979.[3] It was based on the novel The Sin Sniper by Hugh Garner.[5]

Reception

TV Guide rated it 1/5 stars and called it a "typical crime thriller".[6]

Crenna later said that he thought the content was not Canadian-specific enough.[7]

gollark: And both seem like a reasonable response to "people will be eternally tortured if they do not do this".
gollark: I don't *agree* with religious evangelism, I'm saying that it does not seem inconsistent with "true Catholicism" as qh4os says.
gollark: How? Consistently, if you believe that people not believing your thing will go to hell, and hell is bad, you should probably tell them. I'm not sure exactly what Catholic doctrine wrt. that *is* though, I think it varies.
gollark: And our experiments with understanding the underlying ethical particles have been halted after it transpired that colliding ethical entities at 99.99% of *c* actually had ethical associations itself, which caused bad interference.
gollark: Experimental moral philosophy has ethical issues, unfortunately.

References

  1. "Stone Cold Dead (1979)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  2. "Crenna in Toronto Gets to 'Live a Little'". The Montreal Gazette. The Canadian Press. 1978-12-14. p. 52.
  3. Beck, Marilyn (1979-02-12). "Heart Portrayal Draining for Actress". The Victoria Advocate. Associated Press. p. 10C.
  4. "'Unique' Thriller Set in Toronto". Ottawa Citizen. The Canadian Press. 1979-01-02. p. 59.
  5. Goble, Alan (1999). The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter. p. 966. ISBN 9783110951943.
  6. "Stone Cold Dead". TV Guide. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  7. Bawden, Jim. "Best Bets". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 2016-04-07.


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