![]() ![]() Ellen performs on stage, while Tom rides off with McCoy. ![]() Tom bids farewell to Ellen, promising that he’ll always be there for her if she needs him. Later, at a concert, the Sorels open for Ellen and her band. The defeated gang carries their leader away. Tom and Raven duel using sledgehammers and their fists, with Tom ultimately being victorious. Meanwhile, Ellen is on a train with Tom and McCoy, believing that Tom is leaving with her, but Tom knocks out Ellen and returns to town to confront Raven. Price, with reinforcements, is just about to arrest Raven, but is ambushed by an overwhelming amount of Bombers. After having sex, Tom and Ellen discuss the possibility of eloping. As Tom storms out, Ellen follows and the two embrace in the rain. Tom goes to the hotel where Ellen and Billy are staying to collect his reward, but he takes only McCoy's cut and throws the rest back at Billy. Price plans on arresting Raven, so he tells Tom to get out of town, so as to avoid any more violence. Raven meets with Ed Price, the head of the police department, and promises him no more trouble if he arranges for Tom to meet with him alone. The group, along with the Sorels, ditch the bus and take a train back to Richmond. Billy tries to get rid of the corrupt police officers by bribing them, but Tom and McCoy have to resort to holding the police at gunpoint and shooting up their vehicles. The bus is eventually stopped by a police blockade. To escape, the group hijacks the tour bus of a doo-wop group called the Sorels. The group is joined by "Baby Doll", a fan of Ellen's, who warns them that the police are looking for the people who were behind the attack at Torchie’s. Tom escapes on the one intact motorcycle and meets up with the others. Raven confronts Tom and warns him that he will be coming for Ellen and for him, too. Tom sends Ellen off with McCoy and Billy in the convertible, telling them to meet him at the Grant Street underpass and blows up the gas pumps outside a bar. Meanwhile Tom creates a diversion outside by shooting the gas tanks on the gang's motorcycles, and then rescues Ellen. McCoy enters and is led upstairs by one of the Bombers, where she then knocks him out and holds Raven and some of his gang members at gunpoint. In the Battery, they go to Torchie's, a club that Billy used to book bands at and where Raven has Ellen tied up in an upstairs bedroom. McCoy also talks Tom into cutting her in for 10% in exchange for her help. Tom meets Billy at the diner, and Billy agrees to pay him $10,000, but Tom also requires that Billy accompany him into the Battery to get Ellen, since he used to live there. While Reva and McCoy go to the diner where Reva works, Tom acquires a cache of weapons, including a pump action shotgun, a revolver, and a lever action rifle. That night, Tom has a change of heart and agrees to talk to Ellen's manager and current boyfriend, Billy Fish, about rescuing her. Tom then goes to a local tavern, the Blackhawk, where he meets a tomboyish mechanic and ex-soldier named McCoy and lets her stay with him and Reva. Reva tries to convince Tom to rescue Ellen, but he refuses. Upon his return, Tom defeats a small gang of greasers and takes their car. Witnessing this is Reva Cody, who telegrams her brother Tom, an ex-soldier and Ellen's ex-boyfriend, asking him to come home. The Bombers, a biker gang from another part of town called the Battery, led by Raven Shaddock, crash the concert and kidnap Ellen. In Richmond, a city district in a time period that resembles the 1950s (labelled "another time, another place"), Ellen Aim, lead singer of Ellen Aim and the Attackers, has returned home for a concert. The film was a box office bomb, grossing $8 million against a production budget of $14.5 million. Streets of Fire was released in the United States on June 1, 1984, by Universal Pictures. The film stars Michael Paré, Diane Lane, Rick Moranis, Amy Madigan, Willem Dafoe, E.G. It is described in the opening credits and posters as "A Rock & Roll Fable" and is a mix of various movie genres with elements of retro-1950s woven into then-current 1980s themes. Streets of Fire is a 1984 American neo-noir rock musical film directed by Walter Hill and co-written by Hill and Larry Gross. ![]()
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