An orphaned runaway with many extraordinary and athletic talents arrives in a town divided with racial conflict.
A group of teenagers are forced to work together while being stuck in Camp Resurrection for 48 hours.
An unlikely romance develops between a Lakota warrior and a young black woman at an 1890s black college.
Greg is near the end of his senior year in high school, wanting to go to the prom, eyeing Cinny (the school's beauty with brains) from afar, and regularly trippin', daydreaming about being a big success as a poet, a student, a lover. His mom wants him to apply to colleges, but Greg hasn't a clue. One of his teachers, Mr. Shapic, tries to inspire him, too. He finally figures out he can get close to Cinny if he asks her for help with college applications. But friendship isn't enough, he wants romance and a prom date. So, he tells a few lies and, for awhile, it seems to be working. Then, things fall apart and Greg has to figure out how to put the trippin aside and get real.
Tattooed Teenage Alien Fighters From Beverly Hills is an American television series which was released by DIC Entertainment and aired on the USA Network during the 1994–1995 season. The show was a low-budget attempt to emulate the success of Saban's Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. The lower budget is evident from the installments having been produced using videotape rather than more expensive film stock.
Rugg Williams is an American actor, best known as Eugene Glendon on the NBC crime drama, In the Heat of the Night. Other television credits include Swinton Sawyer on DIC's Tattooed Teenage Alien Fighters from Beverly Hills and guest appearances include CBS' Silk Stalkings, NBC's Hunter, and FOX's Beverly Hills, 90210.
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