The film diverges from standard police procedurals here. Instead of simply gathering evidence, Lucy must undergo a "training" regimen that blurs the lines between duty and degradation. She rents a room from a predatory landlady and adopts the persona "Velvet."
| Category | Details | | :--- | :--- | | | Gregory Dark | | Producers | Andrew W. Garroni, Ashok Amritraj | | Writer | J. Reifel | | Cinematography | Zoran Hochstätter | | Music | Anthony Marinelli | | Production Co. | Royal Oaks Entertainment Inc. | | Distributor | Prism Entertainment (VHS) | | Release Date | May 16, 1995 (USA) | | Runtime | 88 minutes | | Language | English | | Budget | Approx. $500,000 |
This article provides the complete Wikipedia-style breakdown of Undercover Heat , explains why the film ranks so highly in specific search algorithms, and dissects its journey from direct-to-video obscurity to "Top 10 Cult Sleaze" lists. According to the film’s Wikipedia entry (which is sparse but dedicated), Undercover Heat follows a standard—but aggressively executed—noir template.
