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Shocking Dark

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Shocking Dark
Poster for the film's release under the Terminator 2 name. This bears some similarity to the original Terminator poster.
Directed byBruno Mattei
Written byClaudio Fragasso
Produced byFranco Gaudenzi
Starring
CinematographyRichard Grassetti
Edited byBruno Mattei
Music byCarlo Maria Cordio
Production
company
Flora Film
Distributed byVariety Distribution
Release date
  • 1989 (1989)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian

Shocking Dark (also known as Terminator II, Terminator 2, Aliens 2, Aliennators, and Contaminator) (Killers of a Venice Beach) is a 1989 Italian science-fiction film written by Claudio Fragasso, produced by Franco Gaudenzi and directed by Bruno Mattei.

Although the film was promoted as a rip-off of James Cameron's The Terminator (1984), it is primarily a rip-off of Cameron's subsequent film Aliens (1986). It was released in some countries as Terminator II, as it had been made two years before Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991).

Background

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Despite the film's original title and artwork presenting it as a sequel to The Terminator, it is not officially associated with that film. The plot has more in common with Aliens.[1] Two years after Mattei's film came out, Terminator 2: Judgment Day (the official Terminator sequel) was released. Mattei's film was not released in the United States.

Cast

[edit]
  • Cristopher Ahrens as Samuel Fuller
  • Haven Tyler as Sara
  • Geretta Giancarlo Field as Koster
  • Fausto Lombardi (as Tony Lombardo) as Lieutenant Franzini
  • Mark Steinborn as Commander Dalton Bond
  • Dominica Coulson as Samantha
  • Mark Zielinski as Stephano
  • Clive Ricke as Drake
  • Paul Norman Allen as Kowalsky
  • Cortland Reilly as Caine
  • Richard Ross as Price
  • Bruce McFarland as Parson
  • Al McFarland as Raphelson

Release

[edit]

Up until 2018, the film had never been released on video in the United States for legal reasons. It was released in countries such as Japan, Brazil, and the film's native country Italy.

Severin Films released the film (under its Shocking Dark title) on Blu-ray on 29 May 2018.[2]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Shocking Dark (also known internationally as Terminator II) is a 1989 Italian science fiction horror film directed by Bruno Mattei (under the pseudonym Vincent Dawn), written by Claudio Fragasso and Rossella Drudi, and produced by Franco Gaudenzi.[1][2] Set in a dystopian, polluted future version of Venice, the film centers on a team of soldiers and scientists dispatched to investigate the gruesome deaths of researchers working on environmental restoration at an underground facility, where they encounter grotesque, alien-like creatures and a betraying cyborg operative.[3][1] Running 90 minutes and blending elements of action, horror, and sci-fi, it stars Christopher Ahrens as the cyborg Samuel Fuller, Haven Tyler as Dr. Sara Drumble, Geretta Geretta, Fausto Lombardi, and Mark Steinborn.[4][5] The plot unfolds as Colonel Brian Parson assembles the Megaforce team following a distress signal from the Venetian research lab, leading to discoveries of contaminated waters breeding monstrous mutants and revelations about a rogue android programmed for sabotage, culminating in a frantic escape involving time displacement elements.[6] Produced by Flora Film on a low budget typical of Italian genre cinema, Shocking Dark premiered at the 1989 Cannes Film Market and was released theatrically in Italy on August 22, 1989, before gaining limited international distribution under various titles like Alienators and Contaminator.[3][5] Renowned in cult film circles for its unapologetic plagiarism of James Cameron's Aliens (1986)—from the squad of space marines battling xenomorphs to the flooded, labyrinthine setting—and The Terminator (1984), including the cyborg antagonist and futuristic aesthetic, the movie exemplifies Mattei's prolific output of exploitation fare in the late 1980s.[1] Despite poor critical reception and low audience scores (such as 18% on Rotten Tomatoes), it has endured as a so-bad-it's-good staple, bolstered by a 2018 U.S. Blu-ray release from Severin Films that highlighted its schlocky charm and practical effects.[2][5]

Overview

Plot Summary

In the year 2000, Venice has been evacuated due to extreme pollution caused by industrial waste, forcing residents to flee the toxic environment. The Tubular Corporation oversees underground cleanup operations in the city's subterranean labs, where scientists work to address the contamination.[7][8] When a distress signal emanates from the labs indicating attacks on the researchers, the Megaforce commando team is dispatched to investigate. Led by figures such as Captain Koster and Franzini, the squad arrives to find the scientists mutilated and the facility overrun by bio-engineered mutant creatures. These grotesque beings are the unintended result of a failed genetic experiment intended to purify the polluted water, which has instead spawned aggressive, humanoid mutants that stalk the tunnels.[8][9][10] Amid the escalating horror, Dr. Sara Drumbull, a member of the investigation team, takes on the role of protector for Samantha, a young survivor found hiding in the labs. As the commandos battle the creatures using shotguns and machine guns, picking off the mutants in brutal confrontations, Sara and Samantha navigate the chaos, uncovering logs that reveal the experiment's catastrophic failure. The group's cohesion fractures under the relentless assaults, with several members falling to the creatures' ambushes in the steam-filled corridors.[9][10][11] The plot reaches its climax with a shocking revelation: Samuel Fuller, a seemingly ordinary corporate liaison from the Tubular Corporation, is unmasked as a cyborg replicant dispatched from the future to eliminate Dr. Raphelson, the scientist responsible for creating the mutants. Employing a concealed mechanical arm, Fuller targets Raphelson's diary, which contains critical details of the genetic project, while systematically turning on the team. In the flooded tunnels, the survivors attempt a desperate escape as a horde of mutants converges, only to face Fuller's rampage, blending the commando-versus-creatures structure reminiscent of Aliens with cyborg pursuit elements echoing The Terminator. The facility's self-destruct sequence activates, forcing Sara and Samantha into a harrowing bid for survival amid the dual threats.[10][11][7]

Cast

The principal cast of Shocking Dark consists primarily of American actors in leading roles, supplemented by Italian performers, reflecting the film's low-budget Italian exploitation production style common in the genre during the late 1980s.[8][12]
  • Christopher Ahrens as Samuel Fuller, the stoic team member revealed as a cyborg assassin.[8][13]
  • Haven Tyler as Sara (also credited as Dr. Sara Drumbull), the primary scientist and surrogate protector figure.[8][13]
  • Geretta Geretta (billed as Geretta Giancarlo Field) as Koster, the tough commando leader handling combat sequences.[8][12]
  • Fausto Lombardi (billed as Tony Lombardo) as Lieutenant Franzini, the team's strategist and coordinator.[8][13]
  • Mark Steinborn as Commander Dalton Bond, the authoritative mission overseer.[8][13]
  • Dominica Coulson as Samantha, the vulnerable young survivor found in the labs.[8][14]
Supporting roles include:
  • Mark Zielinski as Stephano, a scientist victim.[15]
  • Clive Ricke (also spelled Clive Riche) as Drake, the unhinged gunman.[8][14]
  • Paul Norman Allen as Kowalsky, a commando.[8][14]
  • Cortland Reilly as Caine, the tech specialist.[8][14]
  • Richard Ross as Price, a soldier.[8][14]
  • Bruce McFarland as Colonel Parson, the base commander.[8][14]
  • Al McFarland as Dr. Raphelson (also credited as Professor Rafelson), the mad scientist creator.[13][8]
Several Italian cast members adopted anglicized pseudonyms to enhance international appeal, such as Geretta Geretta using "Geretta Giancarlo Field" and Fausto Lombardi as "Tony Lombardo."[8][12]

Production

Development

Shocking Dark was written by Claudio Fragasso and Rossella Drudi, who crafted a script that fused science fiction and horror elements to exploit the burgeoning popularity of action-oriented genre films in the 1980s.[2] The screenplay drew heavily from contemporary Hollywood successes, incorporating a team of commandos battling extraterrestrial threats reminiscent of those in James Cameron's Aliens (1986), including squad dynamics and creature designs.[1] Additionally, it integrated motifs from The Terminator (1984), such as a rogue cyborg operative and a time-traveling assassin narrative, to create a hybrid exploitation vehicle aimed at quick market saturation.[16] The film was directed by Bruno Mattei, an Italian filmmaker renowned for his prolific output of low-budget exploitation pictures that often emulated popular American genres, including the post-apocalyptic horror Rats: Night of Terror (1984). Mattei, who frequently collaborated with Fragasso on scripts, emphasized rapid production cycles to mimic high-profile releases while operating within severe financial limitations. Production was overseen by Franco Gaudenzi under the banner of Flora Film, with the project accelerated to premiere ahead of Cameron's anticipated Terminator 2: Judgment Day in 1991, allowing it to pose as an unauthorized sequel in international markets.[17] This strategy sparked significant marketing controversies, as the film was initially promoted in Europe and Asia as Terminator II without licensing from the franchise owners, prompting rapid rebranding to titles like Aliens 2, Aliennators, and Contaminator to circumvent legal challenges.[1] The low-budget approach, typical of Italian genre cinema's emphasis on imitation over innovation, relied on stock footage, practical effects, and minimal sets to deliver a fast-turnaround product that prioritized commercial viability in the video rental boom.[18]

Filming

Principal photography for Shocking Dark took place over six to seven weeks in 1988, primarily during night shoots with inverted schedules, in locations around Rome and the nearby town of Latina, Italy. The production made extensive use of an abandoned nuclear power plant in Latina to represent the film's polluted underground tunnels, laboratories, and dystopian environments beneath a futuristic Venice. Limited exterior footage was captured in Venice itself as an additional location, while interior scenes depicting flooded canals and decay relied on constructed sets and the power plant's industrial features to simulate the setting without higher-cost on-site filming.[19][20] Cinematography was handled by Richard Grassetti, who employed practical effects for the creature sequences, including minimal props such as one or two rubber-suited monsters, a blobby entity with attached skeletons and webs, and manipulated hands to evoke horror in a style reminiscent of Alien. The low special effects budget resulted in visible wires on some creatures and the reuse of footage to extend action scenes, contributing to the film's rough production values. Editing was handled by Giovanni Paolucci, yielding a fast-paced 90-minute runtime with tension-building cuts. The score was composed by Carlo Maria Cordio, featuring a synth-driven sound blending electronic pulses for sci-fi atmosphere and orchestral elements for dramatic impact.[17][20][21][4][22] The international cast, including American actors alongside Italian performers, created language barriers on set, necessitating post-production dubbing into Italian and English versions to align dialogue. These logistical challenges, compounded by the constrained budget, highlighted Mattei's resourceful approach to low-budget genre filmmaking, influenced by his prior directorial style of efficient, effect-heavy compositions seen in earlier works.[20]

Release

Distribution

Shocking Dark premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1989 under the title Terminator II. It received a theatrical release in Italy on August 22, 1990, distributed by Variety Distribution. The film achieved limited theatrical success in Italy's exploitation cinema circuits, where its niche appeal as a science-fiction horror entry contributed to modest box office performance. Internationally, the film was rolled out in various markets with altered titles to evoke popular franchises while navigating intellectual property concerns, including Terminator II in Japan in 1991 via Humax Pictures, Shocking Dark in Brazil, and similar variations across European countries such as Contaminator.[23][17] Due to the unauthorized use of Terminator branding, no official U.S. theatrical release occurred, resulting in underground video circulation rather than mainstream distribution. Italian producers changed the title from Terminator II to Shocking Dark in subsequent markets to avoid intellectual property conflicts with the Terminator franchise. This approach aligns with director Bruno Mattei's typical exploitation film distribution strategies, emphasizing provocative titling for broader appeal.

Home Video

Following its limited theatrical and international distribution, Shocking Dark saw initial home video availability primarily through VHS releases in Europe and Asia during the early 1990s, often under variant titles like Terminator II in Italy and Germany, Aliennators in Japan, and Contaminator in other markets, with transfers generally suffering from low quality due to the era's analog limitations.[23][24][25] These releases marked the film's entry into consumer markets outside North America, where it remained unavailable on any home video format for nearly three decades, partly due to concerns over its Terminator-inspired branding.[24][26] The film's U.S. debut arrived in 2018 via Severin Films, which issued the first official Blu-ray edition worldwide on May 29, featuring a new 2K high-definition remaster sourced from the original 35mm negative for improved clarity and color fidelity.[27][28][29] This release also recreated the original Italian Terminator II VHS artwork for its limited slipcover variant, evoking the film's exploitative origins while avoiding direct infringement.[30] A standard DVD edition accompanied the Blu-ray, later incorporated into Severin compilations of Italian genre cinema.[24] Post-2018, the film became accessible via streaming on platforms including Tubi and Amazon Prime Video in select regions, broadening its reach to digital audiences.[31][32][33] The 2018 Blu-ray package included special features highlighting the film's production, such as the interview "Terminator in Venice" with co-director and co-writer Claudio Fragasso and co-writer Rossella Drudi, discussing its status as Italian rip-off cinema and influences from Aliens and The Terminator.[34] Additional extras comprised behind-the-scenes photos, the alternate Italian Terminator II opening credits sequence, and the Japanese Aliennators VHS trailer.[35][24] This edition significantly boosted the film's cult following, with the limited slipcover version selling out its initial print run shortly after launch, prompting Severin to issue reprints and standard editions to meet demand.[29][36][37]

Reception

Critical Response

Upon its 1990 theatrical release in Italy under the title Terminator II, the film has been largely regarded in retrospective assessments as derivative schlock, with reviewers highlighting its blatant plagiarism of Aliens through copied scenes, dialogue, and structure, alongside weak scripting and low production values.[38][39] Italian outlets like MYmovies.it and FilmTV.it reflect this sentiment in user reviews, with MYmovies.it averaging 3/5 stars and FilmTV.it showing low scores around 2/5 from limited reviews, advising against viewing due to its "cialtronesca" (cheesy) execution and lack of originality.[40] The marketing as a Terminator sequel further inflated expectations, leading to disappointment over its failure to deliver on sci-fi action promises. In modern reassessments, Shocking Dark has garnered mixed but predominantly low user scores, with IMDb reporting 4.3/10 from 2,168 ratings and Letterboxd averaging 2.5/5 from 3,614 users (as of November 2025).[8][3] Retrospective reviews in horror outlets praise its unintentional humor, fast pacing, and infectious B-movie energy, positioning it as a guilty pleasure for fans of Italian exploitation cinema.[41] Bloody Disgusting highlighted it as a prime example of flattering horror knockoffs, appreciating the audacious mash-up of Aliens and Terminator elements despite the theft.[41] Similarly, Daily Grindhouse lauded the monster carnage and action sequences for their squishy, over-the-top appeal, even amid the cheesiness.[18] Common critiques persist across reviews, focusing on poor creature effects that rely on visible puppetry, awkward English dubbing, and illogical plot twists that undermine tension.[2] Positives, however, include the efficient direction by Bruno Mattei, which keeps the runtime brisk, and energetic action set pieces that evoke low-budget thrills.[18] A notable quote from Braineater.com encapsulates the plagiarism issue: "In many instances, it’s a word-for-word, scene-for-scene plagiarism [of Aliens]... only without the talent or the technique."[42] The film received no major awards or nominations, underscoring its status as an unpretentious exploitation entry rather than a serious contender in genre or mainstream cinema.

Legacy

Shocking Dark exemplifies the 1980s Italian exploitation cinema tradition of producing low-budget rip-offs of major Hollywood successes, particularly in the science fiction and horror genres. Directed by Bruno Mattei and co-written by Claudio Fragasso and Rossella Drudi, the film was initially marketed in some territories as Terminator 2 to capitalize on James Cameron's The Terminator (1984), despite having no official connection, and it incorporates elements from both The Terminator and Aliens (1986). Mattei, a prolific filmmaker known for unauthorized sequels such as Zombie 3 (1988), a non-canon follow-up to Lucio Fulci's Zombie (1979), and Fragasso, whose career included the notorious unofficial sequel Troll 2 (1990), built their reputations on such quick-turnaround mockbusters that blurred intellectual property lines in the international market. This approach was emblematic of the era's "video nasty" phenomenon, where Italian producers like Mattei created sensational, gore-infused schlock to exploit global trends, as seen in his earlier work Contamination (1980), which was among the films targeted by UK censors. Co-writer Rossella Drudi passed away on February 19, 2025.[1][43][18][44] The film's legacy lies in its embodiment of bold, unapologetic plagiarism within exploitation filmmaking, sparking retrospective discussions on the ethics of IP theft in low-budget cinema during the pre-digital age. Mattei and Fragasso's collaboration on Shocking Dark highlighted the Italian industry's strategy of blending popular tropes—such as xenomorph-like creatures and cybernetic antagonists—into original settings like a dystopian Venice, often prioritizing marketability over originality. While it failed to achieve mainstream success upon release, the movie has since been recognized as a quintessential example of 1980s B-movie excess, influencing analyses of how European filmmakers navigated Hollywood dominance through imitation.[45][46][47] Over time, Shocking Dark developed a niche cult following, appreciated for its campy incompetence and "so-bad-it's-good" appeal among fans of obscure genre fare. This appreciation intensified following its first official U.S. release on Blu-ray by Severin Films in 2018, which preserved the film's practical effects and low-fi production as a time capsule of pre-CGI horror aesthetics from the era. The restored edition, featuring interviews with Fragasso and Drudi, has positioned the movie as a midnight screening staple in genre circles, underscoring its enduring value as a artifact of Italian trash cinema.[1][6][18]

References

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