‘Crash and Burn’ Hits Blu-ray in June with New Commentary by Charles Band & Bill Moseley
The weapons of the future are alive in Crash and Burn, coming to Blu-ray on June 10 from Full Moon Features. The 1990 post-apocalyptic sci-fi thriller has been newly remastered in high definition from the original camera negative. Charles Band (Trancers, The Gingerdead Man) directs from a script by J.S. Cardone (The Covenant, Prom Night). […] The post ‘Crash and Burn’ Hits Blu-ray in June with New Commentary by Charles Band & Bill Moseley appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.

The weapons of the future are alive in Crash and Burn, coming to Blu-ray on June 10 from Full Moon Features.
The 1990 post-apocalyptic sci-fi thriller has been newly remastered in high definition from the original camera negative.
Charles Band (Trancers, The Gingerdead Man) directs from a script by J.S. Cardone (The Covenant, Prom Night).
Paul Ganus, Megan Ward, Jack McGee, Eva LaRue, and Bill Moseley star.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary by Director Charles Band and Actor Bill Mosley (new)
- Making of Featurette
- Blooper Reel
- Original Trailer
- Full Moon Trailers
It’s the year 2030 and man’s worst nightmares have become a terrifying reality. Ultraviolet rays have punched through the ozone layer and parched the earth, dooming it to eternal summer. And Big Brother has come to life in the form of Unicom, a multinational corporation that has taken control following a computer induced economic holocaust and various governments defaulting on their national debts.
A group of dissenters, the Independent Liberty Union, has surfaced to fight Unicom’s autocracy. One such dissenter is Lathan Hooks, who together with his granddaughter Arren, runs a TV station in the sand-blown desert. The duo have set up shop in an old junkyard and are using abandoned primitive technology to run the show, in a world where all computers and robots have been banned.
When Lathan plunges to his death in what appears to be an accident, Arren believes it to be the work of a “Synthoid” – a human-like robot – that is programmed to kill all who pose a threat to Unicom. The only thing that can stop the virtually indestructible Synthoid is a dormant robot that Arren brings back to life for a desperate showdown with the relentless killer. But even after one Synthoid has been destroyed, there may be others…
Crash and Burn was marketed as a sequel to 1990’s Robot Jox in most European markets despite having no relation.
The post ‘Crash and Burn’ Hits Blu-ray in June with New Commentary by Charles Band & Bill Moseley appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.