"In the heart of every victim is a hero and he'll tear apart a city to prove it..."
A tough ex-cop goes on a citywide rampage when his daughter is mistakenly kidnapped by a racist, scumbag psycho. This slab of analog glory is 100% non-stop action as our protagonist violently bounces from here to there encountering corrupt cops, his ex-wife, pimps, prostitutes, bouncers and street gangs along the authentically seedy strips of late 70s New York in his quest to find his daughter. We gotta warn ya, with language and violence reaching face-melting levels, this one isn't for the faint of heart.
"It's a B-movie plot with A-level production values, as well as one of the scuzziest major releases of that era. Best of all, the film is also a glorious love letter to late-'70s New York City -- back when the Big Rancid Apple was littered with graffiti-strewn subway trains and dingy sex parlors, the South Bronx looked like someone dropped a nuke, and it all felt like one huge, wonderful, degenerate cesspool..." Shock Cinema Magazine
"Unfortunately, this movie is not available on [modern] home video...And what’s even more unfortunate, that in spite of the racist, pervy antagonist meeting his doom, the social discomfort of this movie may ensure that it never sees the light of day in any official release... Four stars." Medium.com