Trancers 6 | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jay Woelfel |
Written by | C. Courtney Joyner (as Gene Yarbrough) |
Produced by | Johnnie J. Young |
Starring | Zette Sullivan Jennifer Capo Robert Donavan Timothy Prindle |
Cinematography | Paul Deng |
Edited by | Jonathan Ammon Jay Woelfel |
Music by | Jon Greathouse |
Distributed by | Full Moon Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Trancers 6 is a 2002 American science fiction horror film directed by Jay Woelfel and starring Zette Sullivan, Jennifer Capo, Robert Donavan, Timothy Prindle, Jere Jon, Jennifer Cantrell, Ben Bar, James R. Hilton, Kyle O. Ingleman, Gregory Lee Kenyon and Douglas Smith. The film was produced by Johnnie J. Young of Young Wolf Productions.
It is the final Installment in the Trancers franchise.
Synopsis
In a return to the original film's premise, Jack Deth is back – traveling back in time and into the body of his own daughter, Josephine (Zette Sullivan), on a mission to save her life and save the world from the most lethal Trancers yet. Jack / Jo must adapt and survive, avoiding many assassination attempts by more powerful and dangerous zombie-like Trancers than he's ever faced before.
Cast
- Zette Sullivan as Josephine Forrest / Jo Deth
- Jennifer Capo as Shauna Wilder
- Robert Donavan as Dr. Paul Malvern
- James R. Hilton as Dr. Jennings
- Timothy Prindle as Mark
- Jere Jon as Sam
- Ben Bar as Mr. Castle
- Robert Rocque as Deputy Mayor
- Cindy Olmscheid as Deputy Mayor's Wife
- Jozo Zovko as Trancer Joe
- Ivona Rocque as Trancer Girl #1
- Sasha Gallardo as Trancer Girl #2
- Carlos Long as Pimp
- Jennifer Cantrell as Jennings' Hooker
- Christopher Farrell as Jack Deth Double (uncredited)
- Tim Thomerson as Jack Deth (archive footage) (uncredited)
Production
Jack Deth's appearances in his own body are done with stock footage from previous films.
Reception
Reception for the film has been overall negative, mainly due to the lack of Tim Thomerson.[1]
References
External links