Mind Ripper

Mind Ripper

Poster art
Directed by Joe Gayton
Produced by Jonathan Craven
Wes Craven
Peter Sheperd (co-producer)
Written by Jonathan Craven
Phil Mittleman
Starring Lance Henriksen
Giovanni Ribisi
Natasha Wagner
Claire Stansfield
John Diehl
Music by J. Peter Robinson
Cinematography Fernando Argüelles
Edited by Harry Hitner
Release dates
  • August 1995 (1995-08) (UK)
  • October 8, 1995 (1995-10-08) (U.S.)
Running time
108 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget US$8,000,000 (estimated)

Mind Ripper, also known as The Hills Have Eyes III, The Hills Still Have Eyes, or The Outpost, is a horror film released on HBO in 1995. It stars Lance Henriksen and Giovanni Ribisi.

Although it is marketed in some areas as a sequel to the original The Hills Have Eyes and The Hills Have Eyes Part II, no actors, characters, or scenarios link it to those films. Its only connection is producer Wes Craven, who wrote and directed the other two films. His son, Jonathan Craven, is credited as a writer.

Plot

Set in a remote desert location, government scientists perform reanimation experiments in an underground nuclear facility. The goal is to create a superhuman. Their first subject, "Thor," is a specimen from a suicide found in the desert. In the attempts to bring Thor back, an uncontrollable creature is unleashed.

The movie begins with the family unit of Stockton (Lance Henriksen), daughter Wendy (Natasha Gregson Wagner), and son Scott (Giovanni Ribisi), preparing for a visit to the desert. Stockton is a former participating scientist of the experiments. Upon arrival, Stockton finds the current scientists still continuing with their work.

Thor is awakened, and the facility goes into lockdown status. Trapped inside as prey for their creation, the scientists and Stockton's family must defeat Thor or escape from an impenetrable post. As they are picked off by Thor's hunger for a chemical derived from human brains, their means of survival diminishes.

Thor

Thor is a result of science gone wrong. However, unlike the Cannibals or Inbreds from the earlier films or the Mutants of later, he was created through reanimation experiments performed on a suicide victim, rather than radiation exposure. Thor is a cannibal, though his hunger appears to derive from a necessity to ingest a certain chemical found in the human brain. Thor also deals with issues of parentage, reproduction, remnants from his former life, and his mentality that had driven him to suicide.

Cast

Soundtrack

All music property of Hellnote Recordings


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