Assault on Precinct 13

A white-hot night of hate!

7.3
19761h 31m

A highway patrol officer, two criminals, and a station secretary form an unlikely alliance to defend a defunct Los Angeles precinct against a siege by a bloodthirsty street gang.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Theatrical Trailer

Theatrical Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Why We Love It

Why We Love It

Thumbnail for video: Austin Stoker Interview

Austin Stoker Interview

Thumbnail for video: Police Officer Shot Right Outside Of Police Station

Police Officer Shot Right Outside Of Police Station

Thumbnail for video: Unlocking the Prisoners

Unlocking the Prisoners

Thumbnail for video: Nancy Kyes Interview

Nancy Kyes Interview

Cast

Photo of Austin Stoker

Austin Stoker

Ethan Bishop

Photo of Darwin Joston

Darwin Joston

Napoleon Wilson

Photo of Frank Doubleday

Frank Doubleday

White Warlord

Photo of Gilman Rankin

Gilman Rankin

Bus Driver

Photo of James Jeter

James Jeter

Precinct Captain

Photo of John Carpenter

John Carpenter

Gang Member (uncredited)

Photo of Jackson Mundie

Jackson Mundie

Gang Member (uncredited)

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Reviews

C

chris.tmdb

10/10

Awesome film one of my all time favorite movies Plus (Great soundtrack)

J

John Chard

10/10

There are no heroes anymore, Bishop. Just men who follow orders.

Assault on Precinct 13 is written, directed, edited and musically scored by John Carpenter. It stars Austin Stoker, Darwin Joston, Laurie Zimmer, Martin West, Tony Burton, Charles Cyphers and Nancy Kyes. Cinematography is by Douglas Knapp.

If you are going to homage films that you love, or ones that influence you, then you have to get it right. Something John Carpenter most assuredly did with this, his first masterpiece. Plot and structure of film are simplicity extreme, but it's the execution that matters here, the cool veneer of the hero characters, the frightening relentlessness of the gang members who assault the soon to close down police station and the small number of inhabitants within. Interestingly it's actually Precinct 9, Division 13, but Carpenter was no doubt in a playful mood.

Carpenter builds the first half slowly, introducing key characters whilst deftly staging the events that will lead to the actual siege itself. This part of Los Angeles where the story is set is conspicuous by how empty and soulless it seems, even in daylight, which is where the terror actually begins. It's as if residents and locals just prefer to be off the streets at any time of day or night.

The gang, like the folk inside the station, are multiracial, but unlike those inside the gang never speak. They move like silent assassins, no shouting or cussing, just a tidal wave of death, their guns adorned with silencers, which leads to a truly brilliant extended sequence as the gang begin to destroy the building silently! Meanwhile relationships are being formed by those under duress, convicts and police forced to battle side by side in the slightest hope of surviving the night.

There is no flab on show here, no pointless dialogue or scenes which could have been cut, it's a film that is very much to the point. The cast respond well to Carpenter's requirements, be it emotionally, physically or coolly, all while Carpenter's low tone synthesiser plays out its memorably eerie beats. It's a superb lesson in low budget film making from one of the masters of that art. His filmic star may have waned in his later life, but for a time in the 70s and 80s he shone bright, Assault On Precinct 13 was the ignition. 10/10

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