Tank Girl
In the future, the odds of survival are 1000 to 1. That's just the way she likes it.
After a comet disrupts the rain cycle of Earth, the planet has become a desolate, barren desert by the year 2033. With resources scarce, Kesslee, head of the powerful and evil Water & Power Corporation, the de facto government, has taken control of the water supply. Unwilling to cower under Kesslee's tyrannical rule, a pair of outlaws known as Tank Girl and Jet Girl rise up, joining the mysterious rebel Rippers to destroy the corrupt system.
Available For Free On
Trailers & Videos

Original 1995 Trailer

Eureka Classics Trailer

Official Trailer

"Brush your teeth"

Eureka Classics Limited Edition Blu-ray Unboxing

"You take the tank"

Dinner With The Rippers

Ripper Invasion

Escape Attempt

This is a Committee
Cast

Lori Petty
Rebecca / Tank Girl

Naomi Watts
Jet Girl

Malcolm McDowell
Kesslee

Ice-T
T-Saint

Jeff Kober
Booga

Reg E. Cathey
Deetee

Scott Coffey
Donner

Don Harvey
Sgt. Small

Ann Cusack
Sub Girl

Iggy Pop
Rat Face

James Hong
Che'tsai

Richard Schiff
Trooper in Trench

Mary Ann Hermansen
Liquid Silver Dancer

Brian Wimmer
Richard

Dawn Robinson
Model

Charles Lucia
Capt. Derouche

Ann Magnuson
The Madam

Doug Jones
Additional Ripper

Roz Witt
Dr. Nikita
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Malcolm McDowell is the megalomanic "Kesslee" who in a post-apocalyptic Earth is determined to control the most important substance left to man. Water. Meantime, a rag-tag collection of miscreants consisting of the eponymous, "Harley Quinn" style character (Lori Petty), "T-Saint" (Ice-T) and "Jet Girl" (Naomi Watts) who are marauding around with a tank and a jet decide together with some angry kangaroos and "Booga" (Jeff Kober) that vengeance will be their's. What now ensues is a really derivative, repetitive and frankly rather dull semi-animated action adventure that rehashes just about every theme in the book and over-relies on the characterisations that are seriously under-delivered by a cast that are simply not up to the task. McDowell just hams it up the whole time and the dialogue is beyond banal. Rachel Talalay could have done so much more with the sort of "Mad Max" elements of the story, but instead allows this to just drift into a puerile, attitudinal, drama that offers little to engage and a suite of visual effects that we have seen loads of times before. There's a brief appearance from Iggy Pop and the "rippers" bring a certain, welcome, randomness to this otherwise really rather uninspiring flop. Sorry, but I wouldn't bother if I were you.
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