Boiling Point (1993)

Don't miss another programme!
Get reminders on your favourite actors or programmes right where you need them.
digiguide.com

TV guide for just 60p
Over 570 channels with complete descriptions for every channel.
Click here to download and try

Written by Gerald Petievich, James B. Harris

Directed by James B. Harris

Also known as "Estafa y Muerte"

Running Time: 100 minutes (approx)

Production Year: 1993

Rating: 15 Certificate

Production Country: USA/France/Japan

Filmed in Colour

This mediocre ation thriller is about a US Treasury agent who sets out on a mission of revenge against the killer of one of his colleagues.

Red Diamond (Dennis Hopper) is an aging con-man who has just been released from prison with a young and not-so-bright hoodlum called Ronnie (Viggo Mortensen). Ronnie is easily manipulated which probably got him in prison in the first place and is easily.

The two start a new business which is to organize fake-money sales and then kill the buyer to take his money; but when Ronnie kills an undercover secret service agent, his partner Jimmy Mercer (Wesley Snipes) vows revenge on the two criminals and is given one week to catch the killers before being transferred.

Cast

Image for Wesley SnipesWesley SnipesJimmy Mercer
Image for Dennis HopperDennis HopperRed Diamond
Image for Lolita DavidovichLolita DavidovichVikki Dunbar
Image for Viggo MortensenViggo MortensenRonnie
Seymour CasselVirgil Leach
Jonathan BanksMax
Christine EliseCarol
Tony Lo BiancoTony Dio
Valerie PerrineMona
James TolkanLevitt
Paul GleasonTransaction Man
Lorraine EvanoffConnie
Stephanie WilliamsSally
Image for Tobin BellTobin BellRoth
Bobby HoseaSteve

Still looking for more?

 Click here to search the web for Boiling Point

Add a comment

(required)
(required but not displayed)
Your e-mail is also used for adding an Avatar image to your comment using the free and very cool Gravatar.com
 
(your personal web site)

Please note we can not guarantee that programme makers will read your comment as we have no direct relationship with them, so requests for application forms will almost certainly be ignored (try searching Google instead). This is merely an opportunity to register opinions, questions or comments about a programme's content.