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Tasha remembers...I am another person who loved this movie. I caught it on On Demand a day before it was going ... More »
Posted on 03/03/08
Cast:
Davey...Henry Thomas
Hal Osborne...Dabney Coleman
Jack Flack...Dabney Coleman
Rice...Michael Murphy
Kim Gardener...Christina Nigra
George MacCready...John McIntire
Eunice MacCready...Jeanette Nolan
Alvarez...Eloy Casados
Haverman...Tim Rossovich
Morris...William Forsythe
Lieutenant Fleming...Robert DoQui
Marilyn Gardener...Shelby Leverington
Murdoch...Robert Curtin
Chief of Security...Linden Chiles
Guard #1...William Marquez
Guard #2...Wendell Wright
Hal Osborne...Dabney Coleman
Jack Flack...Dabney Coleman
Rice...Michael Murphy
Kim Gardener...Christina Nigra
George MacCready...John McIntire
Eunice MacCready...Jeanette Nolan
Alvarez...Eloy Casados
Haverman...Tim Rossovich
Morris...William Forsythe
Lieutenant Fleming...Robert DoQui
Marilyn Gardener...Shelby Leverington
Murdoch...Robert Curtin
Chief of Security...Linden Chiles
Guard #1...William Marquez
Guard #2...Wendell Wright
Studio:
MCA-Universal
Release History:
1984 - Cloak & Dagger
Davey Osborne is the tale-spinning son of widowed military officer Hal Osborne. When Davey gets handed a special copy of the video game Cloak & Dagger by a dying spy, he discovers a plot to sell vital U.S. secrets to enemies abroad. But who'll believe him? No one, it seems, as Hal and the other adults think it's simply another case of Davey's overactive imagination.
Davey's imaginary hero, Jack Flack, shows up to lend a hand, but he can only carry the boy so far. Once reality sets in, it's up to the Davey's natural ingenuity and determination to get himself and his friends out of the villains' clutches.
Henry Thomas, fresh off his starring role in the megablockbuster E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, starred as Davey, and Dabney Coleman played the dual role of Hal Osborne and Jack Flack. Along with Tron and WarGames, Cloak & Dagger was one of the first Hollywood films to acknowledge the growing popularity of video games. But more importantly to its young fans, the movie acknowledged an older and greater truth: nobody ever listens to kids, even when murderous double agents really are out to kill them.













