Search - Diamond Run on DVD


Diamond Run
Diamond Run
Actors: Don Mogavero, Sean P. Donahue, Fred Gleeck, Peter Harrington, Linda Ljoka
Director: David Giancola
Genres: Action & Adventure
R     2004     1hr 50min


     

Movie Details

Actors: Don Mogavero, Sean P. Donahue, Fred Gleeck, Peter Harrington, Linda Ljoka
Director: David Giancola
Creators: John R. McAleer Jr., Peter Beckwith, Scott J. Jones, Derrick Costa, Marty Poole
Genres: Action & Adventure
Sub-Genres: Action & Adventure
Studio: Mti Home Video
Format: DVD - Color
DVD Release Date: 04/06/2004
Release Year: 2004
Run Time: 1hr 50min
Screens: Color
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Languages: English
We're sorry, our database doesn't have DVD description information for this item. Click here to check Amazon's database -- you can return to this page by closing the new browser tab/window if you want to obtain the DVD from SwapaDVD.
Click here to submit a DVD description for approval.

Similarly Requested DVDs

Hot Fuzz
Widescreen Edition
   R   2007   2hr 1min
   
The Bank Job Digital Copy
Blu-ray
Director: Roger Donaldson
   R   2008   1hr 51min
   
Diamond Dogs
Directors: Shimon Dotan, Samuel Dolhasca
   R   2008   1hr 34min
   
Under Siege 2 Dark Territory
Snap Case
   R   1997   1hr 40min
   
Red Corner
Director: Jon Avnet
   R   1998   2hr 2min
   
The Big Easy
Director: Jim McBride
   R   1999   1hr 42min
   
Cruel Intentions
Director: Roger Kumble
   R   1999   1hr 37min
   
Founding Fathers
Directors: Mark Hufnail, Melissa Jo Peltier
5
   NR   2001   3hr 20min
   
Quigley Down Under
Director: Simon Wincer
   PG-13   2001   1hr 59min
   
Sergeant Cribb A Case of Spirits
4
   NR   2003   5hr 6min
   
 

Movie Reviews

Not Likely To Remain In One's Memory.
rsoonsa | Lake Isabella, California | 11/01/2006
(1 out of 5 stars)

"A lightweight crime themed film, with its cast and crew members often doubling, this item is made to a low standard, that it nearly attains. Weakly budgeted and conceptualized, albeit with a long drawn out narrative, it provides little that one will not have seen elsewhere, and done better, but it does contain an element that gives it a small dollop of interest: most of the piece, following initial sequences in New York City, is shot in and about Rutland, Vermont, a picturesque region only seldom utilized by film production companies. Action opens in Manhattan while a band of former Viet Nam veterans, supervised by their erstwhile military field commander, Sloan (Richard Lynch), is in the process of robbing a jewelry store, one that is, as known to the bandits, providing sanctuary for 150 million dollars of cut diamonds, contained within a briefcase. A two man team of New York Police Department detectives intercepts the heist, with a detective along with several of the robbers dying during a resultant shootout, while an unknown female takes the diamond laden briefcase and flees. Because she is not a member of Sloan's entourage, he is naturally dissatisfied with results of the holdup, and a pursuit of the villains by the surviving detective, Jack Cates, makes things even more awkward for the bandits. As Cates has had two of his on duty partners slain by members of the Sloan operation, he vengefully becomes a rogue cop following a spoor into Vermont where he links up with the mysterious female who has seized the diamonds, Megan Marlow, the two of them reluctantly conjoined as they become, in turn, prey of Sloan's minions who are chasing them, all this while the detective mulls over whether he should arrest the woman for the theft or, instead, delve into why Megan apparently matches his loathing for Sloan. Ofttimes, independent films such as this are damagingly cut in order to increase chances of their being distributed, but in this case abler and more substantive editing is wanting, the screenplay being rife with failings in logic as well as continuity, resulting in a tedious production that will cause a viewer's attention to meander long before its pat conclusion. However, the movie is likely to be enjoyed by those who take pleasure in stuntwork and explosive special effects, all performed with efficiency."