King Cobra (1999 film)

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King Cobra
King Cobra DVD cover.jpg
DVD cover
Directed byDavid Hillenbrand
Scott Hillenbrand
Written byDavid Hillenbrand
Scott Hillenbrand
Guy Stodel
Produced byDavid Hillenbrand
Scott Hillenbrand
Starring Pat Morita
Scott Hillenbrand
Hoyt Axton
Joseph Ruskin
Courtney Gains
CinematographyPhilip D. Schwartz
Edited byGuy W. Cearley
Music byDavid Hillenbrand
Production
company
Distributed byTrimark Pictures
BMG Video
Release date
  • April 27, 1999 (1999-04-27)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

King Cobra is a 1999 Trimark Pictures direct to video horror/sci-fi film directed by Scott Hillenbrand and David Hillenbrand with featured special effects by The Chiodo Brothers. Starring Pat Morita, Scott Hillenbrand, Hoyt Axton, Joseph Ruskin, and Courtney Gains, the film was released April 27, 1999.

Contents

In the film, an experiment with snake venom goes wrong and a giant, genetically engineered hybrid of an Asian King Cobra and an Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake escapes from his lab and into a small town. When snake-bitten bodies turn up everywhere, the mayor of the town wants things hushed up to protect the town's upcoming microbrewery festival. Expert reptile wrangler Nick Hashimoto (Morita) is then hired to bring in the snake before things spiral out of control.

Plot

A genetics laboratory run by Dr. Irwin Burns (Joseph Ruskin) to research aggressive behavior has an accident, resulting in a chemical fire and explosion, and the escape of a 30 ft (9.1 m) long hybrid snake with traits of both the Asian King Cobra (in the film, it is referred to as the African King Cobra, even though the King Cobra species doesn't inhabit the African continent) and the Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake. Loose in the countryside for two years and filled with the experimental aggressiveness drug, the snake, nicknamed "Seth", eventually outgrows his woodland prey and begins hunting the residents of the small brewery town of Filmore. Dr. Brad Kragen (Scott Hillenbrand) conducts an autopsy on a recently found body and determines that the death was caused by a huge snake. He and Police Chief Jo Biddle (Casey Fallo) go to town mayor (and Jo's father) Ed (Hoyt Axton) and demand he cancel an upcoming town lager festival. Ed refuses, but after more deaths, the town eventually brings in herpetologist and hunter Nick "Hash" Hashimoto (Pat Morita).

Cast

Development

When David Hillenbrand and Scott Hillenbrand developed the concept for King Cobra, the film Anaconda was not yet "in the pipeline". They wished to take an approach in the genre in a similar vein as Jaws or Alien . Production problems allowed Anaconda to beat their film to release. [1]

Reception

In 2001, G. Noel Gross of DVD Talk wrote that the snake effects of King Cobra were "better than the CGI-addled Python that followed" and made note of a "hilarious cameo" appearance by Erik Estrada. [2] Derek Armstrong of Allmovie panned the film, calling it poorly conceived and absurd, with the special effects of the snake "so cheap-looking that it can only be seen in flashes". [3] DVD Verdict also panned the film, writing that what was promoted as "30 Feet Of Pure Terror!", was "more like 93 minutes of pure boredom". While noting that Trimark gave the film a nice treatment on its DVD release, they concluded that it was "an incredibly worthless film". [4]

Release

It was released on DVD and VHS. Both have since been discontinued and have for long gone out of print. It is available to view on Vudu, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, and YouTube by LionsgateVOD. It is also available for Google play and iTunes in some countries.

See also

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References

  1. Crow, Thomas. "King Cobra Rules by Thomas Crow". Adapted from Thomas Crow’s article in Fangoria . Lifeworks Entertainment. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  2. Gross, G. Noel (October 9, 2001). "King Cobra: SE". DVD Talk . Retrieved January 3, 2010.
  3. Armstrong, Derek. "review: King Cobra". Allmovie . Retrieved January 3, 2010.
  4. Fitzgibbons, Sean. "DVD review: King Cobra". DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on December 28, 2003. Retrieved January 3, 2010.