| King Cobra | |
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| Directed by | David Hillenbrand Scott Hillenbrand |
| Produced by | David Hillenbrand Scott Hillenbrand |
| Written by | David Hillenbrand Scott Hillenbrand Guy Stodel |
| Starring | Pat
Morita Scott Hillenbrand Hoyt Axton Joseph Ruskin Courtney Gains |
| Music by | David Hillenbrand |
| Cinematography | Philip D. Schwartz |
| Editing by | Guy W. Cearley |
| Studio | Trimark Pictures |
| Distributed by | Trimark Pictures BMG Video |
| Release date(s) | April 27, 1999 |
| Running time | 93 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
King Cobra is a 1999 Trimark Pictures direct to video horror/sci-fi film about an escaped genetically engineered snake. The film was written and directed by David Hillenbrand and Scott Hillenbrand, and featured special effects by The Chiodo Brothers.
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When David Hillenbrand and Scott Hillenbrand developed the concept for King Cobra, the film Anaconda was not yet "in the pipeline". They wished to take an approach in the genre in a similar vein as Jaws or Alien. Production problems allowed Anaconda to beat their film to release.[1]
A lab run by Dr. Irwin Burns (Joseph Ruskin) to research aggressive behavior has an accident resulting in the escape of an aggressive snake which has traits of both the African King Cobra and the Eastern Diamond Rattlesnake. Loose in the coutryside, it grows to 30 feet in length. When the snake outgrows his woodland prey, it begins hunting the residents of the small town of Filmore. Doc Kragen (Scott Hillenbrand) autopsies a recently found body and determines that the death was caused by a huge snake. He and Police Chief Jo Biddle (Casey Fallo) go to the Mayor (Hoyt Axton) and demand he cancel an upcoming town beer festival. The Mayor refuses, but after more deaths, the town eventually brings in expert snake hunter Nick Hashimoto (Pat Morita).
In 2001, G. Noel Gross of DVD Talk wrote that the snake effects of King Cobra were "better than the CGI-addled Python that followed" and made note of a "hilarious cameo" appearance by Erik Estrada.[2] Derek Armstrong of Allmovie panned the film, calling it poorly conceived and absurd, with the special effects of the snake "so cheap-looking that it can only be seen in flashes".[3] DVD Verdict also panned the film, writing that what was promoted as "30 Feet Of Pure Terror!", was "more like 93 minutes of pure boredom". While noting that Trimark gave the film nice treatment on its DVD release, they concluded that it was "an incredibly worthless film".[4]
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