Mainstream remake of the X-rated Forced Entry(1973).
The film was refused a UK cinema certificate in 1982.
Producer Henry Scarpelli was also a long-time comic book artist. Early in his career, he specialized in licensed adaptions for Dell like Hogan's Heroes and Get Smart. At DC Comics, he transitioned to what would become his specialty: Teen humor. Scarpelli pencilled and inked titles like Debbi's Dates, Binky, Binky's Buddies and Angel and the Ape. When DC discontinued the entire genre from their publishing schedule, Scarpelli was recruited by the seminal standard bearer for that genre, Archie Comics. Scarpelli was the main illustrator for Archie's various titles during the 1990s and 2000s. He even launched a short lived titled for Archie Comics, "Glenn Scarpelli Goes to Hollywood" which was a comic retelling of his sons adventures as a child actor on shows like One Day at A Time and Jennifer Slept Here. Glenn Scarpelli has a small part in this film.
One of a number of numerous ''force'' titled films made during the mid-late 1970s and early-mid 1980s. These included: 'Magnum Force' (1973), 'Force: Five' (1981), 'Raw Force' (1982), 'Vigilante Force' (1976), 'Killer Force' (1975, 1976), 'A Force of One' (1979), 'Forced Vengeance' (1982), 'The Delta Force' (1986), 'Forced Entry' (aka 'The Last Victim') (1976), 'Death Force' (aka 'Fighting Mad') (1978) and 'Force 10 from Navarone' (1978).