Cyborg 1989 Movie In Hindi Free Download

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Cyborg
Directed byAlbert Pyun
Produced by
Written by
Starring
  • Deborah Richter
Music by
CinematographyPhilip Alan Waters
Edited by
  • Scott Stevenson
Distributed byThe Cannon Group
  • April 7, 1989
82 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$500,000[citation needed]
Box office$9.5–10.2 million[2][3]
  1. Cyborg 1989 Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd

Cyborg 1989 Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd

Cyborg subtitles. AKA: Slinger, Heat Seekers, Spider-Man, Masters of the Universe 2, Masters of the Universe 2: Cyborg. He's the First Hero of the 21st Century. And He's Our Only Hope. A martial artist hunts a killer in a plague-infested urban dump of the future.

Cyborg, also known as Slinger, is a 1989 American martial-artscyberpunk film directed by Albert Pyun. Jean-Claude van Damme stars as Gibson Rickenbacker, a mercenary who battles a group of murderous marauders led by Fender Tremolo (Vincent Klyn) along the East coast of the United States in a post-apocalyptic future. The film is the first in Pyun's Cyborg Trilogy. It was followed by 1993's Knights (originally entitled The Kingdom of Metal: Cyborg Killer) and Omega Doom in 1997.[original research?]Cyborg was followed by sequels Cyborg 2 and Cyborg 3: The Recycler.

  • 5Legacy

Plot

A plague known as the living death cripples civilization. A small group of surviving scientists and doctors — located in Atlanta, Georgia, home of the CDC — work on a cure to save what remains of humanity. To complete their work they need information stored on a computer system in New York City. Pearl Prophet volunteers for the dangerous courier mission and is made into a cyborg through surgical augmentation.

Pearl, accompanied by bodyguard Marshall Strat, retrieves the data in New York but is pursued by the vicious Fender Tremolo and his gang of pirates. Fender wants the cure so he can have a monopoly on its production. Strat, badly injured while fighting the pirates, tells Pearl to leave him and find a mercenary, known as a 'slinger', who can escort her to safety. She gets cornered but is saved by a slinger named Gibson Rickenbacker. After she explains her situation, they are overrun by Fender's gang, and Gibson is knocked out by falling debris. Fender demands that she accompany him to Atlanta or die.

Fender's gang slaughters a family and steals their boat. They head south for Atlanta via the Intracoastal Waterway with the captive Pearl. Gibson, who had been tracking the pirates, arrives at the scene of slaughter later that night. A shadowy figure attacks him, but he disables her. She turns out to be Nady Simmons, a young woman who mistook him as a pirate. Nady, whose family was wiped out by the plague, joins Gibson. Gibson is less concerned with a cure for the plague than with killing Fender. Gibson and Nady trek southward through the wastelands, where bandits ambush them. Concerned for Nady, Gibson unsuccessfully attempts to convince her to stay away. After declining sex with Nady, Gibson reveals that all he cares about is revenge against Fender, who killed his lover and destroyed his chance to have a normal life and family.

Intercepting Fender and his crew near Charleston, South Carolina, Gibson defeats most of his men, but Fender shoots him with an air rifle. Now nursing a gunshot wound, Gibson realizes Haley (his dead lover's younger sister whom Fender kidnapped) is now a loyal member of Fender's crew. He flees the pirates and ends up alone with Pearl and Nady. Pearl refuses to go with him — she calculates that Gibson is not strong enough to defeat Fender and will be unable to get her to Atlanta safely. She says she will go along with Fender and lure him to his death in Atlanta, where she has resources at her disposal.

Tired, wounded and badly outnumbered, Gibson flees with Nady through the sewer into a salt marsh, where they are pursued by the rest of the pirates and eventually separated from each other. Gibson is thoroughly beaten by Fender and crucified high on the mast of a beached, derelict ship. Haley lingers at the scene but still leaves with Fender. Gibson spends the night on the cross. In the morning, near death, he kicks the mast repeatedly with his dangling foot in a last fit of rage. The mast snaps, sending him crashing to the ground, his arms still tied and nailed to the cross. Finally, Nady appears out of the marsh to free him.

Gibson and Nady intercept Fender once again in Atlanta, this time better prepared. Fender's gang is taken down one by one until he and Gibson face off. During their fight, Nady rushes Fender with a knife, but he stabs and kills her. Gibson in turn stabs Fender in the chest. Thinking him dead, Gibson embraces Haley, who, during the battle turned decisively against Fender. However, Fender gets back up, and they continue to battle in a nearby shed, where Gibson finally kills Fender by impaling him on a meat hook. Gibson and Haley escort Pearl to her final destination, before heading back off.

Cast

  • Jean-Claude van Damme as Gibson Rickenbacker
  • Deborah Richter as Nady Simmons
  • Vincent Klyn as Fender Tremolo
  • Dayle Haddon as Pearl Prophet
  • Alex Daniels as Marshall Strat
  • Blaise Loong as Furman Vux / Pirate / Bandit
  • Ralf Möller as Brick Bardo (credited Rolf Muller)
  • Haley Peterson as Haley
  • Terrie Batson as Mary
  • Jackson 'Rock' Pinckney as Tytus / Pirate

Production

Cannon Films initially intended to make a sequel to the 1987 He-Man film Masters of the Universe and a live-action Spider-Man film. Both projects were planned to be shot simultaneously by Albert Pyun.[4] Cannon, however, was in financial trouble and had to cancel deals with both Mattel and Marvel Entertainment Group, the owners of He-Man and Spider-Man, respectively. Cannon had already spent $2 million on costumes and sets for both films and decided to start a new project in order to recoup that money. Pyun wrote the storyline for Cyborg in one weekend. Pyun had Chuck Norris in mind for the lead, but co-producer Menahem Golan cast Jean-Claude van Damme. The film was shot for less than $500,000 and was filmed in 23 days.[5] The film was shot entirely in Wilmington, North Carolina.

Several of the characters' names are references to well-known manufacturers and models of guitars and other musical instruments.

  • Gibson Rickenbacker: Gibson, Rickenbacker
  • Fender Tremolo: Fender, Tremolo arm
  • Marshall Strat: Marshall Amplifiers, Fender Stratocaster
  • Les: Gibson Les Paul
  • Pearl Prophet: Pearl drums, Prophet 5 synthesizer
  • Nady Simmons: Nady Systems, Inc. and Simmons electric drums

After the success of Bloodsport, Cannon films offered Jean-Claude van Damme the lead in Delta Force 2, American Ninja 3 or Cyborg. He chose the latter although he later admitted 'I didn't like [the film] so much.'[3]

Jackson 'Rock' Pinckney, who played one of Fender's pirates, lost an eye during filming when Jean-Claude van Damme accidentally struck his eye with a prop knife. Pinckney sued Van Damme in a North Carolina court and was awarded $485,000.[6]

Violent scenes were heavily cut to gain an R rating rather than an X, including a throat-slitting and some blood and gore during the village massacre. Also excised was the death of a man Van Damme was fighting, which caused an inconsistency that made him look like he suddenly disappeared.[7][8]

Reception

Cyborg received a generally negative reception from critics despite the box office success.[9][10][11][12] Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports a 20% positive score based on 15 reviews and an average rating of 2.9/10.[13] The film debuted at number four at the American box office[14] and went on to gross $10,166,459.[15]

Legacy

Sequels

Cyborg 2, starring Elias Koteas and Angelina Jolie, was released in 1993. Cyborg 3: The Recycler, a direct-to-video release, followed in 1995. Both films bear little to no relation to the first film and were heavily panned by critics, even more than the original.

Alternate cut

In 2011, director Albert Pyun's Curnan Pictures got hold of the missing tapes of the original cut of Cyborg through Pyun's original choice for score artist, Tony Riparetti. This director's cut of the film features Pyun's editing and previously unreleased scenes. It is commercially available through the director himself.[16] Pyun's director's cut was released in 2014 in Germany with the film's original title 'Slinger'.

In popular culture

American rapper Method Man sampled most of Fender's opening words as the opening lyrics in the song 'Judgment Day' from his 1998 album Tical 2000: Judgement Day. The lyrics are slightly modified. The intro is also in the opening of the song 'World Damnation' by the death metal band Mortician. The intro of Fender talking about death and starvation is thought as the official opening of metal band Chimairas' song 'Resurrection.' It is often played at live shows as an intro. The same intro is also played the beginning of a song by Australian, Christian, gore-grindcore band Vomitorial Corpulence.

References

  1. ^'Cyborg (18)'. British Board of Film Classification. 2000-03-31. Retrieved 2011-09-08.
  2. ^'Cyborg'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2015-02-06.
  3. ^ abThompson, A. (1989, Aug 27). Punch lineage. Chicago Tribune (1963-Current File) Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/1015813964
  4. ^Cronin, Brian (2013-01-30). 'Movie Legends Revealed: He-Man & Spider-Man Films Became Cyborg? – Spinoff Online – TV, Film, and Entertainment News Daily'. Spinoff.comicbookresources.com. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  5. ^Loreti, Nicanor. Interview with Albert Pyun. La Cosa Fantastico #113 (July 2005). Retrieved on September 6, 2010.
  6. ^'Bodybuilder Wins $487,500 For Injury By Van Damme'. Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  7. ^'THE NEVER BEFORE SEEN DIRECTOR'S CUT OF CYBORG UNEARTHED!'. Twitch Film. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  8. ^'A few words with albert pyun on the recent cyborg re-release'. Twitch Film. Archived from the original on 2011-03-26. Retrieved 2011-03-04.Cite uses deprecated parameter dead-url= (help)
  9. ^'Cyborg'. Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
  10. ^'Cyborg'. Washington Post. 1989-04-11. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
  11. ^Holden, Stephen (1989-04-08). 'Cyborg'. The New York Times. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
  12. ^'Cyborg'. Deseret News. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
  13. ^'Masters of the Universe 2: Cyborg (1989)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
  14. ^'WEEKEND BOX OFFICE : 'Major League' Wins Season Opener'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-05-15.
  15. ^'Cyborg (1989)'. Box Office Mojo. 1989-05-02. Retrieved 2013-09-28.
  16. ^'New Ultra Violent Cut of Albert Pyun's Cyborg Unearthed'. dreadcentral.com. 2011-04-07.

External links

  • Cyborg on IMDb
  • Cyborg at AllMovie
  • Cyborg at Box Office Mojo
  • Cyborg at Rotten Tomatoes
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cyborg_(film)&oldid=906035181'
Edit

Directed by

Albert Pyun

Writing Credits(WGA)

Albert Pyun... (written by) (as Kitty Chalmers)

Cast (in credits order) complete, awaiting verification

Jean-Claude Van Damme ... Gibson Rickenbacker
Deborah Richter ... Nady Simmons
Vincent Klyn ... Fender Tremolo
Alex Daniels ... Marshall Strat
Dayle Haddon ... Pearl Prophet
Blaise Loong ... Furman Vux / Pirate / Bandit
Ralf Moeller ... Brick Bardo (as Rolf Muller)
Haley Peterson ... Haley
Terrie Batson ... Mary
Jackson 'Rock' Pinckney ... Tytus / Pirate / Bandit
Janice Graser ... Vorg
Robert Pentz ... Base / Pirate / Bandit
Sharon K. Tew ... Prather / Pirate / Bandit
Chuck Allen ... Vondo / Pirate / Bandit
Stefanos Miltsakakis ... Xylo / Pirate / Bandit
Kristina Sebastian ... Young Haley
Thomas Barley ... Willy
Dale Frye ... Sather / Pirate / Bandit
Jophery C. Brown ... Saloon Owner / Pirate / Bandit (as Jophery Brown)
Jim Creech ... Roland Pick
Matt McColm ... Pirate / Bandit
Karen Spell ... Pirate / Bandit
James Irwin ... Pirate / Bandit (as James G. Irwin)
Johnny Grady Jr. ... Pirate / Bandit
Michael Halford ... Pirate / Bandit (as Michaell Craig Halford)
O.D. Wilson ... Pirate / Bandit
Bruce Frye ... Pirate / Bandit
Tim Gilbert ... Pirate / Bandit
Bill Morrison ... Pirate / Bandit
Tommy Evans ... Pirate / Bandit
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Nena Barley ... Mother of Boy Bouncing Ball (uncredited)
Patrick Barley ... Boy Bouncing Ball (uncredited)

Produced by

Yoram Globus... producer
Menahem Golan... producer
Tom Karnowski... line producer

Music by

Kevin Bassinson

Cinematography by

Philip Alan Waters... director of photography

Film Editing by

Scott Stevenson
Rozanne Zingale... (as Rozanne Zingale)
Sheldon Lettich... (uncredited)
Jean-Claude Van Damme... (uncredited)
Cyborg 1989 Movie In Hindi Free Download

Casting By

Beth Ann Bowen
Nancy Lara-Hansch... (as Nancy Lara)

Production Design by

Douglas H. Leonard... (as Douglas Leonard)

Set Decoration by

Yvonne Hegney

Costume Design by

Heidi Kaczenski

Makeup Department

Teri Blythe... key makeup artist
Greg Cannom... special makeup effects
Mitch Devane... special makeup effects artist: Cannom crew
Rudolph Eavy III... assistant makeup artist
Keith Edmier... special makeup effects artist: Cannom crew
Earl Ellis... special makeup effects assistant
Matt Falls... special makeup effects artist: Cannom crew
Thomas Floutz... additional makeup effects
Loren Gitthens... special makeup effects artist: Cannom crew
Nancy J. Hvasta Leonardi... makeup artist (as Nancy Hvasta)
Michelle Johnson... hair stylist
Susan Lewis... assistant hair stylist
Bart Mixon... cosmetic make-up
Larry Odien... special makeup effects artist: Cannom crew
Cindy Rosenthal... special makeup effects coordinator: Cannom Creations, Inc.
Aaron Sims... cosmetic make-up
John Vulich... special makeup effects artist: Cannom crew

Production Management

Marc S. Fischer... executive in charge of production
Christopher Pearce... unit production manager

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

Barbara D'Alessandro... second assistant director
Tom Elliott... second unit director
Michael Katleman... first assistant director
James Lansbury... second assistant director (as Jim Lansbury)
Bob Lewis... second assistant director
Jon Paré... first assistant director (as Jonathan P. Paré)

Art Department

Bill Alford... assistant property master
Wenden K. Baldwin... title design
Jim Brinson... construction coordinator (as James Arthur Brinson)
William Shaw Burney... assistant property master
Marc Dabe... assistant production designer
Richard Keith Darwin... painter
Esty F. Davis... carpenter
Joel DeLoach... art department coordinator
Matthew G. Fann... assistant property master
Rebecca Fenneman... set dresser
William Foy... carpenter
Joe Griffith... conceptual artist
George Hesse... set dresser (as George Hesse II)
Rick Hoberg... storyboard artist
Fisher Howe... scenic painter
Isom Ison III... lead carpenter
Thomas Richard Lambeth... conceptual artist
Ann Munter... lead person (as Anne Munter)
John Perkinson... set dresser
Tim Pope... property master (as Timothy Pope)
Mike Ryan... carpenter
Kyle Seidenbaum... title design
Dawn Serody... on set dresser
Stewart Shaw... swing gang
Harold Shelton... set dresser (as Herold Shelton)
George Simcox... mold maker
Ron Sistare... swing gang
Eytan Sternberg... set dresser
David Stonestreet... carpenter
Matthew Sullivan... lead person
Scott Tabor... property buyer
Alan Walker... graffiti artist
Eric Warren... assistant production designer
Jeffery Williams... swing gang
Dave Wittkower... set dresser
Ralph Woollaston... supervising carpenter
Brian Kontz... plasterer (uncredited)

Sound Department

Terrisa Algarin... foley artist
Jim Bridges... sound
Richard Burton... sound editor
Mark S. Cafolla... second assistant sound editor
Tina Canny... sound recordist
Thierry J. Couturier... sound editor
David Cunningham... re-recording mixer
Patrick Cyccone Jr.... re-recording mixer
Gary Dowling... sound mixer
Peter Elliott... second assistant sound editor
Golden Felton... sound editor
Kurt Nicholas Forshager... foley editor
Robert Friedman... foley artist
Tony Garber... supervising sound editor
Teresa García... first assistant sound editor (as Teresa Garcia)
Albert Gasser... sound editor
Stanley B. Gill... sound recordist
Tommy Goodwin... adr mixer / foley mixer
Antony Gray... boom operator
Kini Kay... sound editor
Godfrey Marks... adr editor
Frank A. Montaño... re-recording mixer (as Frank A. Montano) (as Jr.)
Judy Oseransky... second assistant sound editor
Tony Pascuzzo... sound recordist
Jeffrey L. Sandler... sound editor
Alan Selk... sound mixer (as Alan J. Selk)
Dean St. John... adr recordist / foley recordist
Renee Tondelli... second assistant sound editor
Bill Van Daalen... sound effects editor
Dan Yale... sound editor
Asher Yates... sound editor

Special Effects by

William Dawson... special effects technician (as William E. Dawson Jr.)
Joe Digaetano... special effects supervisor
R.J. Hohman... special effects supervisor
Tim Jones... special effects assistant
Geoffrey C. Martin... special effects technician (as Geoff Martin)
Larry Reid... special effects foreman
Jeep Stapleton... special effects assistant
Laszlo Stumpf... special effects assistant (as Laszlo 'Les' Stumpf)
Karin Hanson... special effects hair (uncredited)

Visual Effects by

Betzy Bromberg... optical supervisor: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
David Emerson... optical camera: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Ernest Farino... visual effects supervisor: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc. (as Ernie Farino)
John Huneck... camera operator: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Leslie Huntley... production supervisor: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Michael Joyce... model maker: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Justin Kohn... character animation: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Ken Marschall... matte artist: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Bret Mixon... rotoscope: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Heather Pumphrey... visual effects production assistant: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Gene Warren Jr.... visual effects supervisor: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.
Christopher Warren... go-motion technician: Fantasy II Film Effects, Inc.

Stunts

Jophery C. Brown... stunts (as Jophery Brown)
Tom Elliott... stunt coordinator
Tim Gilbert... stunts
Blaise Loong... stunts
Matt McColm... stunts
Shannon Gordon... stunts (uncredited)
Jim O'Rear... stunts (uncredited)

Camera and Electrical Department

Monty Bass... grip
Logan R. Berkshire... grip (as Logan Berkshire)
Byron J. Cohen... still photographer
Phillip Dillon... additional photographer / gaffer
Malcolm Doran... best boy grip
Leroy 'Slim' Evans... electrician
Cobie Fair... key grip
Bill Finger... second assistant camera (as William Finger)
Warren Fox... best boy electrician
Dave Goodwin... electrician
Rufus Granger Jr.... grip (as Rufus Granger)
Tony Hardmon... second assistant camera
Herb Harton... additional camera assistant (as F. Herb Harton)
Billy Hendricks... electrician (as William Hendricks)
Charles 'Tom' Hinson... grip (as Tommy Hinson)
Tom Jensen... second assistant camera
Walter 'T.J.' Johnson... grip (as Tom Johnson)
Adam Jones... gaffer
Jon LaFollette... grip
Ned Martin... second assistant camera
Patrick McArdle... first assistant camera
George Mooradian... additional camera operator
Stephen Perry... best boy electrician
D.L. 'Pete' Peterson... crane operator
Michael G. Riba... assistant: Mr. Pyun (as Michael Riba)
Clive Richards... electrician
Christian Silver... best boy grip
Mark Smith... electrician (as Mark R. Smith)
Tommy Ray Sullivan... electrician (as Tommy Sullivan)
G. Kilroy Thomas... cable man
Jim Thorpe... electrician
Michael Robert Thorpe... electrician
James Tomaro... pre-rig gaffer
Andy Sydney... first assistant camera: 'a' camera (uncredited)

Casting Department

Libby Featherston... extras casting assistant
Burton Sharp... voice casting
Martha Spainhour... extras casting

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Wanda Evans... seamstress (as Wanda J. Evans)
Allyn Cetta Katleman... wardrobe assistant (as Allyn Cetta)
Nancie Kopelow... set costumer
Deborah Latham... costume supervisor
Barbara Miller... seamstress
Patricia Jayne Rogers... wardrobe
Jenny Schaffner... key costumer
Christine H. Scott... costumes
Betty Wright Thompson... seamstress

Editorial Department

Michael Alden... post production supervisor / post-production supervisor
James Gavin Bedford... assistant editor
Carole Henderson Harrington... apprentice editor (as Carole Harrington)
Alain Jakubowicz... post production supervisor
Robert Kunovits... apprentice editor (as Robi Kunovits)
Omneya 'Nini' Mazen... post-production coordinator
Ruben A. Mazzini... additional editing
Cloria Perry... apprentice editor
Angelo Russo... color timer
Sydney Conrad Shapiro... assistant editor / first assistant editor
Joe Shugart... apprentice editor (as Joseph W. Shugart)
Stan Sztaba... negative cutter
Anne-Marie Vitello... negative cutter
Ron Vitello... negative cutter (as Ronald Vitello)

Location Management

David Blake Hartley... location manager

Music Department

Lisa Drew... music coordinator
Virginia S. Ellsworth... music editor
Joachim H. Hansch... music supervisor
John La Salandra... music editor (as John LaSalandra)
Damian 'Rocky' Polito... assistant music editor (as D. Rocky Polito)
Zach Tow... soundtrack producer (uncredited)

Transportation Department

Edward W. Bozeman... driver
Anthony Forester... transportation co-captain
Johnny French... driver
Cathie Hegler Godwin... driver (as Cathie Godwin)
Roy A. Grace... driver (as Roy Grace)
Jimmy Jones... transportation coordinator
Ted Mehous... transportation captain
Randall Pickett... driver (as Randy Pickett)
Tom Rainey... driver
Joel Renfro... transportation coordinator
Jim Speth... driver
Greg Stancil... driver

Other crew

Sheila Allen... accounting assistant
Patricia Bischetti... production supervisor
Beth Ann Bowen... assistant: Mr. Pyun
Mary Bridges... production secretary (as Mary M. Bridges)
C.F. Burton... set medic
Christine Burton... craft service
Elisabeth Clay... intern
Michael L. Coble... stand-in
Robert D. Edwards... production assistant
Brett Stephen Gantt... key production assistant
Jim Goodman... production assistant
Linda Grimshaw... production coordinator: NC
Brad Hart... production assistant
Victoria Leigh Hetzler... production assistant
Cathleen M. Huet... stand-in
Nina Kawasaki... assistant: Mr. Pyun
Hunter Lambeth... intern
Blaise Loong... consultant: sword and martial arts
Merry Lowry-Donner... script supervisor
Beth Marks Nelson... production coordinator: L.A.
Susan Muir... production accountant
Brian S. Owen... production assistant
Don Michael Paul... additional writer: second assistant sound editor
Robert Pentz... weight trainer
Linda Pickett... craft service
Greg Pugh... production assistant
Michel Qissi... fight trainer: Mr. Van Damme
Cindy Rosenthal... assistant: Mr. Pyun
Ernest Shadday... production assistant
Eric Sternlicht... fitness consultant
Rodney Straub... production assistant
Joe Straw... production accountant: second assistant sound editor
Joseph Vittorie... supervising production coordinator (as Joseph N. Vittori Jr.)
Joyce Wagner... unit publicist (as Joyce A. Wagner)
John Achorn... adr voice group (uncredited)
Rik Converse... production assistant (uncredited)
Michael Grasso... edged weapon advisor (uncredited)

Thanks

Steve Beuth... special thanks
Lindy Blythe... special thanks
Andree Gibbs... special thanks
Chester Kaczenski... special thanks
Don Michaelson... special thanks