Dennis Hopper plays Dan Morgan, the infamous real-life 1800?s outlaw. Morgan is an Irish immigrant working as a gold digger in the treacherous Australian brush. Rejected by his comrades, Morgan resorts to stealing horses ... more »- only to be caught and sentenced to jail. After years of abuse and brutality he is released and falls back into his bandit ways. Soon Morgan is wanted at any price, dead or alive, setting the backdrop for this intense and riveting thriller. DVD Features: -Informative and inspiring introduction by Lloyd Kaufman, President of Troma Entertainment and creator of The Toxic Avenger! -Fascinating interview with Philippe Mora, director of Mad Dog Morgan! -The Make Your Own Damn Movie Box Set film school in a box! -Original theatrical trailers for Pterodactyl Woman from Beverly Hills and Rowdy Girls, Foreplay, The Wedding Party and Madigan?s Millions! -Radiation March« less
Old school! A young Dennis Hopper is in this if you are a fan!
Movie Reviews
..Is this complete anywhere on dvd???
Chris J. Stilley | Dallas Tx | 04/23/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)
"....I was hugely dissapointed in the Troma release of this film..I thought finally after paying more for company dvd with a little more prestige that the usual bargain bin varieties..I'd be getting a complete version of this film finally on DVD!...NOPE..all the nasty tidbits were cut!..the Head getting blown thru at the beginning in the Chinese opium Den..the more graphics aspects of the prison rape..the bucket of animal guts scene...the [...] scene in the Bar..the old man mooning the Bush Cop...even the mention of the word Scrotum!..All cut in the Troma Release!...I'm sticking with my old Thorn EMI VHS!!!!..I'm Pissed!..cuz I love this movie!"
Wrong aspect ratio on Troma DVD transfer
a listener | pacific northwest | 01/02/2006
(1 out of 5 stars)
"The film was originally shot in the 2.35:1 aspect ratio. But this 2005 DVD release from Troma Entertainment presents the film in a 1.66:1 aspect ratio print cropped directly from the "pan and scan" full-screen print that was made for VHS releases. The film has never been seen in its original 2.35:1 aspect ratio since its theatrical release."
Talk About a Sleeper!
oscar_freak | 05/10/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I picked this movie on a whim, having nothing better to do that Saturday afternoon, and man, was I glad that I did. Filmed in 1976, this fairly low-budget movie stars Dennis Hopper as an Irish prospector-turned-outlaw during the Australian gold rush of the 1850s-1860s. He joins forces with an aboriginal renegade (played by David Gulpilil, who would cover similar territory a year later in the film of Thomas Keneally's THE CHANT OF JIMMIE BLACKSMITH) and goes on the lam, evading psychotic former prison guards and police. This movie, with its atmospheric cinematography, innovative folk music, rather seems like the Australian answer to BAD COMPANY. Hopper is really good as the harassed Morgan (with a respectable brogue, no less) and Frank Thring (who was rewarded with the greatest closing line in any movie since CASABLANCA), probably best known for playing Pontius Pilate in BEN HUR, is a sinister magistrate who tries to give Morgan his comeuppance. Don't overlook this movie."
New special edition sucks
Michele De Angelis | Italy | 12/17/2009
(1 out of 5 stars)
"BEWARE THE TRANSFER IT'S STILL HORRIBLE AND THE ENCODING OF THE DVD HAS PLENTY OF DIGITAL ARTIFACTS. LOOKS TROMA JUST RIPPED OFF THE OZ DVD, I'LL CHECK ABOUT THIS AND POST MORE,AFTER I'LL GRAB THE OZ SPECIAL EDITION. I WAS MISLEAD HERE CAUZ' I THOUGHT THAT THEY GOT THE NEW MATERIALS CREATED DOWN THERE, AND CAUZ' THEY HAD HERE EVEN A DIRECTOR'S INTRO.
BY THE WAY BUY AT YOUR OWN RISK I'LL TRY TO BE REFUNDED.
"
A fine movie that deserves a better DVD
Trevor Willsmer | London, England | 09/08/2005
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Mad Dog Morgan is a real rarity, which is a great shame, because Philip Mora's film has much to recommend it and deserves much better than a dodgy cropped transfer on the Troma label. More a chronicle of the exploits of `Mad Dog' Morgan, the bushranger who inspired Ned Kelly, than a conventional narrative, it's a non-judgemental portrait of an inconsistent, unpredictable man - after going to great lengths to deny he'll ever "be made a murderer," he then becomes one almost immediately when he drunkenly sets his gun off, wounding his host, and then hurrying off to kill the man that he himself has just sent after a doctor. It's very much a seventies film (in the best sense), with a sense of the violence of both the landscape and the people trying to eke a living from it, and it constantly surprises with neat little details such as the magistrate who doles out long sentences simply because there are still so many roads to build. Despite being at the height of his drugs-and-booze lost period, Dennis Hopper gives a pretty good performance as the naïve and contradictory folk hero cum psychopath, even managing a fairly convincing Irish accent. There's an impressive supporting cast of familiar Aussie faces, not least Gulpilil as Morgan's beloved partner in crime and Frank Thring at his most superciliously unpleasant as the Superintendant: few actors could seem more natural when he and his social circle start casually divvying up Morgan's body parts in the final scene (the head for an anthropologist, the scrotum for the Superintendant's new tobacco pouch). Although not overly graphic, it's still fairly strong meat."