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Danger Island (film)
1992 American TV series or program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Danger Island, also known as The Presence, is a 1992 made-for-television film.
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Synopsis
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People on a tropical island have to evacuate when the island erupts in a coup or civil war. With the main airport under military control, the Americans converge on an airstrip where Rick Pearsall runs an air transport service with his DC-3.
The plane flies through a violent storm and crashes into the ocean after it is struck by lightning. About half of the passengers manage to survive on one of the inflatable life rafts. Included are swimsuit model Laura, biology professor Diana, Diana's daughter Ariel, juvenile delinquent Brian, young Melissa, middle-aged Frank, bro Matt, embassy representative Karen, Marine guard Vic, and mysterious Ben Fields, who apparently has US government ties. After several days, Karen spots an island, which they paddle to. It seems like a tropical paradise, but mysteries and problems soon crop up. Ariel finds a human skull with a bullet hole in it, along with a Jeep on a dirt road. The party decides to follow the road to look for assistance. When Rick and Frank enter the water to beach the raft for the night, they are attacked by an unseen underwater creature, with squid-like tentacles and spines like a sea urchin. Diana unsuccessfully tries to neutralize the toxin. Overnight, Frank goes into the water and metamorphosizes into a reptilian sea monster with scales and webbed hands and feet.
They follow the road, but Rick starts having psychic flashbacks of events on the island. They eventually find an American research station that was abandoned by its staff in 1976. Hacking the computer system, Ariel and Brian find that the station is named MK-Naomi, a name Ben is secretly familiar with.
Rick leaves one night after more flashbacks. Laura, Ben, Matt, and Vic head out to search for him and soon encounter the island's indigenous tribe and are taken to their village. They spend the night, but Vic has a terrifying hallucination while trying to make out with a native woman and they quickly leave.
Diana deduces that the station was involved in research for a wide range of biological weapons, including extrasensory perception, as in Rick's case. Rick returns after visiting the village and finding a hut with research materials from a scientist with a conscience, who had sabotaged the station and taken an antigen with him.
Frank follows a trail the party had left for him to the research station. He breaks through the front door and terrifies the party. They fend him off using a carbon dioxide fire extinguisher. The search party returns from the village, whereupon they debate what to do about Frank. They decide to try to use the antigen elixir from the hut to cure Frank. Rick lures Frank into a walk-in freezer and injects him with the elixir. Frank mostly reverts to human form but dies moments later.
Rick is given the remainder of the elixir and improves, but he retains his extrasensory abilities, deducing from a brief touch that Laura is a model (which she's ashamed of being) and that Ben has been to the island before.
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Cast
- Lisa Banes as Diana
- Richard Beymer as Ben
- María Celedonio as Melissa (as Maria Celedonio)
- Gary Graham as Rick
- Kathy Ireland as Laura
- Joe Lara as Matt
- Christopher Pettiet as Brian
- Beth Toussaint as Karen
- Eddie Velez as Vic
- Nikki Cox as Ariel
- June Lockhart as Kate
- Steve Goldsberry as Frank
- Ray Bumatai as Tupac
- Kimo Hugho as Chief
- Gina Maria Aurio as Linda
References
- Christopher Meeks. "Danger Island". Variety Television Reviews 1991-1992. 18 September 1992.
- "TV Movies of the Week". New York. 21 September 1992. pp 74 & 115.
- "Danger Island" in "TV review". The Hollywood Reporter. 18 September 1992. See also 22 September 1992.
- Tom Shales. "Danger Island" in "The Camelot Dynasty". Washington Post. 18 September 1992.
- Vernon Scott. Nobody's trying to turn a silk purse into a.... UPI. 17 September 1992.
- "Danger Island". The Radio Times Guide to Films. BBC Worldwide. 2000. p 334.
- Donald C Willis. "Danger Island". Horror and Science Fiction Films IV. 1997. p 107.
- Michael J Weldon. "The Presence". The Psychotronic Video Guide. Titan Books. 1996. p 439.
- Science Fiction, Horror & Fantasy Film and Television Credits. McFarland.
External links
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