
America's Deadliest Home Video 1993
"...a killer road movie."
Jack Perez's 1993 dark comedy-crime hybrid *America's Deadliest Home Video* flips the home-movie format into a tense, gritty ride across the California highways.
Director: Jack Perez
Cast


Frequently Asked Questions
What is America's Deadliest Home Video (1993) about?
This 1993 thriller follows an innocent motorist filming a solo road trip who's abducted by three violent criminals. To survive, he's forced to document their escalating spree of robberies and murders, blurring the line between captive and conspirator.
Who directed America's Deadliest Home Video?
Jack Perez directed this cult road-crime hybrid, merging handheld tension with dark comedic edge.
Who stars in America's Deadliest Home Video?
The film stars Danny Bonaduce, Mick Wynhoff, Mollena Williams, Melora Walters, and Gretchen Bonaduce.
Is America's Deadliest Home Video (1993) worth watching?
Though unrated, its raw energy and moral ambiguity make it a compelling watch for fans of gritty 90s indie crime films. The improvised feel and low-budget authenticity give it a unique, if uneven, edge that's hard to replicate.
How long is America's Deadliest Home Video?
The film runs for 87 minutes.
About America's Deadliest Home Video (1993) — A Hostage's Camcorder Captures a Crime-Soaked Road Trip
Jack Perez's 1993 dark comedy-crime hybrid *America's Deadliest Home Video* flips the home-movie format into a tense, gritty ride across the California highways. A lone driver filming his cross-country trip gets caught in a violent spiral when three escaped convicts hijack his van, forcing him to document their chaotic crime spree—robberies, shootouts, and all. The film thrives on raw tension and absurd humor, blurring the line between victim and collaborator as the hostage's camera becomes complicit in the chaos. With its handheld camera work and improvised vibe, it captures the late-night TV aesthetic of 90s indie cinema while delivering a morally murky, adrenaline-fueled story.
Leveraging familiar tropes of the road movie genre, *America's Deadliest Home Video* strips away glamour to expose the seedy underbelly of chance encounters and desperate choices. The claustrophobic van becomes a microcosm of societal collapse, where survival trumps morality, and every frame shot by the protagonist feels like a betrayal. Its low-budget intensity and flawed characters make it a cult curiosity—a film that asks uncomfortable questions about complicity and voyeurism long after the credits roll.