Dark Angel Gothic Dress for Women - Perfect for Halloween & Cosplay
Dark Angel Gothic Dress for Women - Perfect for Halloween & Cosplay

Dark Angel Gothic Dress for Women - Perfect for Halloween & Cosplay

$26.24 $34.99 -25% OFF

Free shipping on all orders over $50

7-15 days international

18 people viewing this product right now!

30-day free returns

Secure checkout

12606053

Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa
apple pay

Description

A police detective must stop the murderous rampage of a criminal alien who's addicted to human endorphins.

Reviews

******
- Verified Buyer
Devastated after his partner is killed in an undercover assignment, Houston police detective Jack Caine (Dolph Lundgren) joins with FBI agent Arwood "Larry" Smith (Brian Benben) in investigating the strange killings of drug criminals. A seven-foot alien with long white hair named Talec (Matthias Hues) attacks people in socially-isolated situations, saying softly in a hoarse eerie voice, "I come in peace" to his victims, using exotic technology and causing more strange deaths to happen. Reconstructing the crime scene in the drug criminals' nightclub, Caine and Smith discover a strange disc embedded in a stereo speaker, which, after Smith delicately removes it, zooms around the nightclub and at them before lodging itself in the speaker again. A scientist friend named Bruce (Mark Lowenthal) at a university places the disc in a field completely void of charge so that the disc now harmlessly hovers; Bruce explains to Caine and Smith that the disc is "the most powerful self-contained electromagnet" he has ever seen, and Smith states that the human body carries a small electrical charge that attracts the disc as a weapon. Caine's girlfriend, coroner Diane Pallone (Betsy Brantley), determines that the strange deaths happened from massive heroin overdoses, but she doesn't understand the strange small single holes in the victims' foreheads. After Caine is nearly killed by Talec in intercepting a mundane drug deal, Diane explains that heroin stimulates the pituitary gland of the brain to produce endorphins as a pleasure chemical, and then Caine realizes that the strange holes in the victims' foreheads were made from drilling extractions for the endorphins. A law-enforcement alien named Azeck (Jay Bilas of the Duke basketball team) strongly pursues Talec in three fireball shootouts, explains in a dying state from the last shootout to Caine and Smith that Talec wants the endorphins as an illegal drug for their society, and emphatically says that Talec must be stopped to prevent many more harvesting deaths in the future. After Azeck dies in a small contained explosion of bursting bright white light, Smith takes Azeck's gun to a large outdoor fountain at night to give to FBI Inspector Switzer (David Ackroyd), who then attempts to kill Smith so as to eliminate him as a source of information on the important case; Caine shoots Switzer, saving Smith's life and saying reflectively, "Never trust nobody -- Caine Manual, Page One, Chapter One"; disillusioned, Smith tosses his FBI notebook on top of Switzer's floating dead body in the fountain water. After a fireball shootout with Talec on a foggy cold night, Caine and Smith accidentally acquire the alien's case of endorphins, and they along with Diane lead the determined Talec on a chase to a huge chemical-processing building for the tremendous fiery showdown. This movie features excellent acting, many fireball explosions, and pulsing techno music. I particularly liked Caine's charcoal-gray Monte Carlo as it is an attractive antique car that has a sleek long design that current cars do not have.
Top