Trancers: City of Lost Angels

Trancers: City of Lost Angels (also known as Trancers 1.5) is a short science fiction film that was released on DVD in 2013 and later a bonus addition for other releases of the original Trancers on Blu-ray. It consists of approximately 20 minutes of footage lifted from the unreleased 1988 anthology film, Pulse Pounders, which also featured two other segments. It stars Tim Thomerson who reprises his role as the time journeying cop, Jack Deth, from 1985's Trancers.[1] The film is marketed as a digitally restored lost sequel. The film takes place between Trancers and Trancers II.

Trancers: City of Lost Angels
Directed byCharles Band
Produced byCharles Band
Written byDanny Bilson
Paul De Meo
StarringTim Thomerson
Helen Hunt
Distributed byEmpire Pictures
Release date
  • September 2013 (2013-09)
Running time
20 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Jack Deth, the super cop from the future, has put away three centuries worth of time traveling criminals. But Deth’s most dangerous collar, the ultraviolent assassin Edlin Shock (Velvet Rhodes), has escaped from her maximum security holding cell and won’t rest until she’s exacted revenge. Meanwhile, Deth is trying to make a life for himself as a private eye in 1988 Los Angeles with his hot-blooded girlfriend Lena (played by Academy Award-winning actress Helen Hunt). Relationship troubles are just the beginning of Deth’s problems when he learns that Edlin Shock has followed him back in time. Aided by his former police chief McNulty, whose consciousness is inhabiting the body of a 13-year-old girl, Jack Deth will have to use his wits, as well as his fists, to save the past, present, and future!

gollark: I mean...
gollark: Solution: make all guns from radioactive materials so people don't want to have them.
gollark: It *isn't* in less gun-y countries like this one.
gollark: I lean somewhat libertarian, so I'd say "guns to anyone who is demonstrated to be reasonably sane and able to handle guns safely and is probably not a criminal".
gollark: Probably somewhat lower. I'm not certain. Addressing the causes of crime is probably generally better than increasingly strict weapons laws.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2016-02-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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