Rampage (1987 film)

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For the 1963 adventure film starring Robert Mitchum, see Rampage.
Rampage

Promotional poster
Directed by William Friedkin
Produced by William Friedkin
David Salven
Screenplay by William Friedkin
Based on Rampage 
by William P. Wood
Starring Michael Biehn
Alex McArthur
Nicholas Campbell
Music by Ennio Morricone
Cinematography Robert D. Yeoman
Editing by Jere Huggins
Studio DEG
Distributed by Metropolitan Filmexport (France)
Miramax Films (US)
Release dates
  • September 11, 1987 (1987-09-11) (Boston)
  • November 23, 1988 (1988-11-23) (France)
  • October 30, 1992 (1992-10-30) (United States)
Running time 97 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $796,368[1]

Rampage is a 1987 American crime drama film written, produced and directed by William Friedkin. The film stars Michael Biehn, Alex McArthur, and Nicholas Campbell.

Plot

Charles Reece is a serial killer who commits a number of brutal mutilation-slayings in order to drink blood as a result of paranoid delusions.

Reece is soon captured. Most of the film revolves around the trial and the prosecutor's attempts to have Reece found sane and given the death penalty. Defense lawyers, meanwhile, argue that the defendant is not guilty by reason of insanity.

The prosecutor, Anthony Fraser, was previously against capital punishment, but he seeks such a penalty in the face of Reece's brutal crimes after meeting one victim's grieving family.

In the end, Reece is found sane and given the death penalty, but Fraser's internal debate about capital punishment is rendered academic when Reece is found to be insane by a scanning of his brain for mental illness. In the ending of the original version of the film, Reece is found dead in his cell, having overdosed himself on antipsychotics he had been stockpiling. In the ending of the revised version, Reece is sent to a state mental hospital, and in a chilling coda, he sends a letter to a person whose wife and child he has killed, asking the man to come and visit him. A final title card reveals that Reece is scheduled for a parole hearing in six months.

Cast

Influences

Charles Reece is loosely based on serial killer Richard Chase.[2] The crimes that Reece commits are slightly different from Chase's, however; Reece kills three women, a man and a young boy, whereas Chase killed two men, two women (one of whom was pregnant), a young boy and a 22-month-old baby. Additionally, Reece escapes at one point - which Chase did not do - murdering two guards and later a priest. However, Reece and Chase similarly had a history of mental illness and an obsession with drinking blood. Unlike Reece, Chase was sentenced to death, but he was found dead in his prison cell, an apparent suicide, before the sentence could be carried out.[3][4]

Soundtrack

The film's score was composed by Ennio Morricone and was released on CD by Virgin Records.

Release

Rampage was originally shot in 1987 in Stockton, California; it played at the Boston Film Festival in September of that year, and ran theatrically in some European countries in the late 1980s. Plans for the film's theatrical release in America were shelved when production studio DEG, the distributor of Rampage, went bankrupt. The film was unreleased in North America for five years. Director Friedkin reedited the film, and changed the ending (with Reece no longer committing suicide in jail) before its US release in October 1992.[5] The European video versions usually feature the film's original ending.

Home media

As of 2010, the film has been released on DVD only in Poland, by SPI International.

References

  • Friedkin, William, The Friedkin Connection, Harper Collins 2013

External links

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