Killer Image

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Killer Image
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DVD cover
Directed byDavid Winning
Written byDavid Winning
Stan Edmonds
Produced byDavid Winning
Bruce Harvey
Rudy Barichello
StarringMichael Ironside
John Pyper-Ferguson
M. Emmet Walsh
Krista Errickson
CinematographyDean Bennett
Edited byDavid Winning
Ron Sanders
Alan Collins
Anne Ditchburn
Music byStephen Foster
Distributed byGroundstar Entertainment
Malofilm
Seville Pictures (video release)
Release date
  • 1992 (1992)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
BudgetC$750,000 (estimated)

Killer Image is a 1992 independent Canadian suspense film directed by David Winning. It stars Michael Ironside and John Pyper-Ferguson. The story centers on two brothers, one a powerful senator, one a ruthless killer. A photographer captures images of the politician in a compromising position and is murdered. Now his brother has discovered the film and wants vengeance.

When Max Oliver (John Pyper-Ferguson) learns his photographer brother has been killed, he suspects it was no random murder. And when he finds his brothers' last photos of a powerful senator (M. Emmet Walsh) and a prostitute, Max gets a clear picture of a deadly political cover-up. Seeking to expose his brother's killer, Max enters a murderous game of cat and mouse, stalked by a cold-blooded assassin (Michael Ironside) who has Max dead in his sights.

Production

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The film was shot in the September and October 1990 in locations in and around Calgary, Alberta. Production took 20 days. Malofilm, a distributor from Montreal, and Pierre David, in Los Angeles, were partially funding the project, along with seed-money from the Alberta government.[1][2] The film was released in Canada and the United States in 1992, being distributed by Malofilm, but did not receive a home video release until the early 1993 thru Paramount Home Video and received its US premiere as a finalist at the 1992 Houston Film Festival. Elbow Falls was used in the climatic scene. Actor Michael Ironside falls to his death here at the end of the film.

Reception

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The Calgary Herald published a review in March 1992 that said David Winning’s sharp stylish exploitation movie, is a triumph of first-rate technique over less than first-rate content.[3] Chuck O’Leary on Rotten Tomatoes called it an implausible B thriller made watchable by Michael Ironside's portrayal of another clenched-jawed psycho.[4]

References

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