
Color, 1987, 87 mins. 5 secs.
Directed by George P. Cosmatos
Starring Sylvester Stallone, Brigitte Nielsen, Reni Santoni, Andrew Robinson, Brian Thompson, John Herzfeld, Lee Garlington, Art LaFleur, Marco Rodriguez
Scream Factory (Blu-ray) (US RA HD) / (1.85:1) (16:9), Warner Bros. (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)
based on the novel Fair Game by Paula Gosling
(later adapted under its original title as a Cindy Crawford vehicle), Cobra marked a reunion with his Rambo director, George P. Cosmatos (The Cassandra Crossing, Of Unknown Origin), a legendary taskmaster who was still more than willing to let Stallone have final say on the set. The film was made by the legendary Cannon Group for distributor Warner Bros., an on-and-off arrangement that also included Masters of the Universe, Superman IV: The Quest for Peace, and Stallone's immediate project after this one, Over the Top. Essentially Stallone's bid for a Dirty Harry-style cop action vehicle (right down to casting Andrew Robinson, Scorpio from the original Dirty Harry), Cobra was a big box office hit (though not so much with critics), also finding a long life on TV and home video where it earned subsequent generations of fans and a solid cult following.
from the human race. Cobra's boss (Robinson) is none too pleased with his extreme tactics, of course, but things escalate quickly when model Ingrid (Rocky IV's Nielsen,
Stallone's wife at the time) witnesses the New Order members including their leader, the Night Slasher (Thompson), on a murder spree in a parking garage. Since she's now a prime target, Ingrid falls into the custody of Cobra and his partner, Tony (Santoni), who go incognito out of town only to find the psychopathic gang right on their tail.
second-run theaters and VHS. 
either.) "Meet the Disease" (24m5s), an interview with actor Marco Rodriguez, the supermarket killer at the beginning, starts off with the genesis of his career and covers his casting in this film after trying out for the role that ultimately went to Thompson. He also goes into the "metaphor" of shooting up all that food. Like Thompson, he also paints a portrait of Cosmatos as a shouting type who
wasn't always the best communicator. He even shows off his original script, which he mentions in passing is 103 pages (which makes you wonder about rumors of a 130-minute workprint, though a longer alternate version did air on TV). Robinson comes up next for "Feel the Heat" (14m15s) in which he clarifies the original confrontation at the end of the film (which actually sounds a lot cooler and more twisted), confesses he didn't like the script, bemoans the excessive music video-style editing, and speaks warmly about Stallone's accessibility. In "Double Crossed" (9m5s), actress Lee Garlington (who made this in between Psycho II and III) discusses the cameraderie of the cast and crew, her big final action scene, and her rapport (or mostl lack thereof until the last day) with Stallone. Actor Art LaFleur offers his own take in "A Work of Art" (8m23s) about how he came over straight from Italy (doing Zone Troopers) and greatly enjoyed the experience of making the film, even enjoying a Stallone reunion later on Oscar. A vintage making-of featurette (7m50s) is a fairly typical promo piece featuring some behind-the-scenes footage, interview snippets with the lead actors and Cosmatos, with the best material coming in the last few minutes focusing on the stunt preparation for the climactic scene. A teaser trailer (in great stereo) and the theatrical are also included, both in nice HD scans with the latter looking far better than its cruddy SD incarnation on the previous Blu-ray. Two separate galleries are also included, one for stills and the other for posters and lobby cards. WARNER BROS. (Blu-ray)