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Bombshell (1997 film)

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Directed by
  
Paul Wynne

Music by
  
Ennio Di Berardo

Director
  
Paul Wynne

Music director
  
Ennio Di Berardo

4.3/10
IMDb

Written by
  
Paul Wynne

Initial release
  
1996

Screenplay
  
Paul Wynne

Cinematography
  
Angel Locsin

Produced by
  
Wyatt Knight Steven Paul Patrick Peach Vicky Pike Jeff Ritchie Paul Wynne

Starring
  
Henry Thomas Mädchen Amick Frank Whaley Pamela Gidley Brion James Michael Jace Martin Hewitt

Edited by
  
Christopher Roth Joan Zapata

Cast
  
Mädchen Amick, Henry Thomas, Shawnee Smith, Frank Whaley, Brion James

Similar
  
Henry Thomas movies, Science fiction movies

Bombshell trailer


Bombshell is a sci-fi film/thriller written and directed by Paul Wynne and starring Henry Thomas, Mädchen Amick, Frank Whaley, Pamela Gidley, and Brion James. It is produced by Wyatt Knight, Steven Paul, Patrick Peach, Vicky Pike, Jeff Ritchie, and Paul Wynne (himself). The production company is Molecular Films and Wynne/Pike Productions.

Contents

Bombshell 1997 video trailer


Plot

In the year 2011, a sophisticated Los Angeles Company, Nanolabs, prepares to advertise a cancer cure in the form of nano-engines, microscopic molecular machines which mutate and restore organic tissue cell by cell. Genius Buck Hogan (Henry Thomas) starts to have serious doubts when lab animals start to die. Profit-greedy CEO Donald (Brion James) ignores him and devises human tests and news conferences.

The same night, a strange-looking masked figure traps and anesthetizes Hogan. When hogan awakens, he learns one of his kidneys has been expertly replaced with a biodegradable sac that according to later publications, holds corrosive acid. The masked man promises Hogan an antidote only if he complies in picking up and delivering three packages. When the departmental LAPD refuses to help, and Hogan's fiancee Angeline(Mädchen Amick) is abducted, Hogan rips open a package and discovers it is empty. Hogan realizes that the courier act was a ruse to cause him to touch boxes coated with nano-engines, which penetrate his skin and are reacting with the sac. Hogan traces the potential culprit, fellow employee and career rival Malcolm Garvey (Frank Whaley), who forces the couple into Nanolabs at gunpoint during Donald's big press tour.

Revealing that the cancer cure is actually a carcinogen, Garvey also tells that the nano-engines inside Hogan have converted his implant into a destructive bomb. In the following panic, Garvey is shot dead and Angeline and Hogan remain in the building. Fortunately, Angeline happens to be a surgeon and executes an effective bomb-ectomy on the spot. They flee as the lab explodes, but Garvey's caution is lost in the pointless electronic media.

Production

Filming was taken place in Los Angeles, California. It was produced by Molecular Films and Wynne/Pike Productions. It was distributed by Crystal Sky Worldwide, Spentzos Film Home Video, and Trimark Pictures.

Reception

Critical reception to the film has been negative. TV Guide wrote

"While not quite a dud, bombshell never quite matches the level of its low-budget but visually arresting depiction of the 21st century."

Some praise went to the plot of the film "that the nano-engines... assemble an explosive device inside Hogan's gut is a neat payoff; too bad Wynne couldn't think of a better way to get there (or escape from it)." However criticism was directed to the running of the film "the game is mostly up at the 70-minute mark,... director Paul Wynne pads the remaining running time with a protracted car chase and... fruitless attacks on shallow TV journalism."

Surprise praise was given to cinematographer Angel Colmenares... BOMBSHELL is worth watching if only for Angel Colmenares' snazzy cinematography, which paints the future-shock sets with electric colors and sometimes slips into time-lapse imagery."

References

Bombshell (1997 film) Wikipedia