Nemesis 2: Nebula
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Nemesis 2: Nebula | |
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Directed by | Albert Pyun |
Written by |
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Produced by | |
Starring | |
Cinematography | George Mooradian |
Edited by | Ken Morrisey |
Music by | Anthony Riparetti |
Distributed by | Imperial Entertainment |
Release dates |
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Running time | 83 minutes |
Countries |
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Language | English |
Nemesis 2: Nebula is a 1995 science fiction film directed by Albert Pyun. The sequel to Nemesis (1992), it stars Sue Price, Tina Coté, Earl White, Jahi J.J. Zuri, and Chad Stahelski. Nemesis 2 was shot in Globe, Arizona. It was followed by Nemesis 3: Prey Harder and Nemesis 4: Death Angel, both released in 1996.
A compilation version exists which combined the four Nemesis films into one 100-minute feature that Scanbox was going to release before the company went bankrupt in 2000. This version was released only in Eastern Europe in 2003, primarily in Poland.
Synopsis
[edit]73 years after Alex failed, humans have lost the Cyborg Wars and they are now slaves to the cyborg masters. Rebel scientists have developed a new DNA strain which could signal the end of the cyborgs, and it is injected it into a pregnant volunteer.
When the cyborgs learn of the woman and her baby, both are listed for termination. To escape, she steals a cyborg ship and is transported back in time to East Africa in 1980, where the mother is killed but the baby is saved. It takes 20 years, but a cyborg bounty hunter named Nebula eventually locates the young woman, named Alex, and travels back in time to terminate her.
Cast
[edit]- Sue Price as Alex
- Zachary Studer as Young Alex
- Chad Stahelski as Nebula
- Tina Coté as Emily
- Earl White as Po / Juna
- Jahi J.J. Zuri as Zumi / Rebel #2
- Karen Studer as Zana
- Sharon Bruneau as Lock
- Debbie Muggli as Ditko
- Dave Fisher as Oslo
- Richard Cetrone as Rebel Mercenary Soldier #1
Reception
[edit]One reviewer noted that the film appeared to have been an unrelated film involving aliens that was repurposed as a Nemesis sequel [1] and was critical of Price's performance, weak storyline and minimal relation to the original film, a theme that he later brought up in his review of the sequel.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Longden, Mark (20 July 2014). "Nemesis 2: Nebula (1995) |". ISCFC.net. Archived from the original on 29 February 2016. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
- ^ Archived 7 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine[permanent dead link]
External links
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