Raven (film)

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Raven
Directed byRussell Solberg
Written byJacobsen Hart
Produced byScott Levitta
Rex Piano
Stu Segall
StarringBurt Reynolds
Matt Battaglia
Krista Allen
David Ackroyd
CinematographyJohn Dirlam
Edited byChris Worland
Music byHarry Manfredini
Production
company
Release date
  • December 11, 1996 (1996-12-11)
(Germany)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Raven is a 1996 American direct-to-video action film starring Burt Reynolds.

Plot

A secret government agency known as Four Star Group has sent a team of black-ops soldiers into Bosnia. Their mission is to retrieve a top secret piece of military hardware. On their way home, "Raven" decides to go into business for himself. Raven plans to sell the device on the black market. He tries to convince his partner, "Duce", to sell out as well. Duce refuses, effectively ending their friendship, and leaving Raven no choice but to terminate Duce. Duce escapes with the device, and refuses to give it to Four Star Group.

On returning stateside, Raven assembles a team of ex-special-forces soldiers to help him eliminate Four Star Group. Raven even tracks down Duce, asking if he would like to bury the hatchet and help him take out their former employers. Duce again declines Raven's offer, which doesn't sit well with Raven, placing the two of them on a direct collision course with one another.

Cast

Production

The film was originally called Raven Team.[1] Reynolds said he changed every one of his lines in the script. "The really talented ones understand it's a collaborative effort and if you say something funny they say, 'I wrote that.'" He added, "This movie is very much a copy of that Travolta movie, Broken Arrow... I play the Travolta part. It's a part I can play. It's my part, my persona. And if you play a pink flamingo, you can play one for life, if it's a hit."[2]

In addition to attending the Burt Reynolds Institute for Film and Theatre, co-star Battaglia was a personal acquaintance and protégé of Reynolds, due to a friendship the veteran actor had struck with his father Carmello Battaglia during their days as college football teammates.[3] Battaglia had already appeared next to Reynolds on several occasions, including a two-episode role on Evening Shade. But according to him, the star was unaware that he had been cast in Raven until the beginning of the shoot.[4] The two would co-star again in two made-for-television Universal Soldier sequels in 1998.[4]

References

  1. ^ Beck, Marilyn; Smith, Stacy Jenel (28 March 1996). "Reynolds Shedding Toupee, High Salary for Striptease". Los Angeles Daily News. p. L2.
  2. ^ Hirschberg, Lynn (1996-06-16). "Deliverance". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved 2018-08-28.
  3. ^ Byrne, Wayne (20 December 2019). Burt Reynolds on Screen. Jefferson: McFarland & Company. pp. 211–212. ISBN 9781476638119.
  4. ^ a b Wardle, Paul (September 1998). "Showtime Sequels: Universal Soldiers". Cinefantastique. Vol. 30, no. 5–6. Forrest Park: Frederick S. Clarke. pp. 12–15.