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| Endangered Species | VHS TapeStarring: Robert Urich, JoBeth Williams, Peter Coyote Directed By: Alan Rudolph
| 2 Used starting at: | $28.75 |
| | 1 Collectible starting at: | $59.88 |
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| | Binding: | VHS Tape | | Rating: |  | | Run Time: | 97 unknown-units | | Format: | Anamorphic, NTSC | | Studio: | MGM/UA | | Number of Discs: | 1 | | Sales Rank: | 11,283th |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description About a retired New York cop on Vacation in America's West who is drawn into a female sheriff's investigation of a mysterious series of cattle killings. Filmed in Wyoming, Colorado, and New York. The mysterious mutilations that occur in the film are based on real incidents. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 2 reviews)
| Great Genre Piece! by John H. Jennings (Bedford, Texas USA) 5 Stars May 30, 2005
I saw this in original release, and am now looking to see it in VHS or DVD.
I have a soft spot for better than average B flicks set in the sticks, and this one fits the bill.
I dig stuff like "The Fog", and the TV classic, "The Gargoyles", basically anything red state and alien.
I'm gonna order it in VHS, and hope it fits my memory.
I really wish they'd put this out in DVD,
but am scouring old VHS rubbish bins.
Black helcopters and mutilated beef cattle, who can ask for anything more?
| | Severely underrated, a must for DVD by priopasm (Ft Bragg, NC) 5 Stars December 11, 2004 One of the truly great conspiracy theories/mysteries/thrillers of all time. Set in Colorado, the overall plot revolves around the true story of mysterious cattle mutilations in the American West. Are they performed by devil worshipers, space aliens, Soviet Spetznaz? Whatever you think, it's a depiction of a skillful, powerful, high tech entity that threatens to destroy the townspeople along with its ranching livelihood. Director Alan Rudolph does a superb job that is rivaled by the likes of John Carpenter and Michael Mann. Though known better for "Vega$" and "SWAT", Robert Urich proves his ability outside of TV. The version I have is a grainy copy recorded off of an RCA Selektavision Video Disc in 1983 (anyone out there rember those things?). It would be great if MGM would digitally restore this to DVD (as it has done with other great movies that I thought were too dated and obscure to restore). Any Art Bell fans in the house? Check out this movie in the new and used section. I promise you won't be disappointed.
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