After killing a witness, LAPD detective Sgt. Lloyd Hopkins (Woods) is suspended by his superiors. However, he becomes increasingly convinced that a series of murders he’s recently been working on have some sort of connection.
Alone, unarmed and unauthorized, Hopkins goes on the trail of a serial killer. Over the course of the investigation he crosses swords with Kathleen McCarthy, a feminist bookshop manager (Warren), whose old high school yearbook may hold a vital clue to the mystery. —Wikipedia
Veteran Hollywood industry figure who has served triple duty as a producer, director, and screenwriter. Harris’ most notable contribution to American cinema was producing several seminal early films directed by Stanley Kubrick. The Harris-Kubrick Pictures Corporation turned out such provocative features as “The Killing” (1956), “Paths of Glory” (1957), and “Lolita” (1962).
Harris and Kubrick went their separate ways after “Lolita” with the producer venturing on to form James B. Harris Productions in 1963. As a producer-director, Harris’s subsequent feature credits were relatively sparse: “The Bedford Incident” (1965), a Cold War naval drama starring Richard Widmark and Sidney Poitier; “Some Call It Loving” (1973), which marked his screenwriting debut, an uneven modern retelling of “Sleeping Beauty” set in southern California starring Zalman King, Tisa Farrow, and Richard Pryor; “Fast Walking” (1982), a prison drama starring James Woods; and “Cop” (1988), which he scripted, also… read more