Tuesday 21 May
 
 

Nightfall

As Simon Lam gets older, he gets better. The veteran actor has appeared in such in seminal HK action films of the 1990s as Once Upon a Time in China (opposite Jet Li) and Bullet in the Head (directed by John Woo); in the aughts, he graced audience and critical favorites Election and Ip Man.
05/20/2013 | Comments 0

Grand Duel

Lee Van Cleef enjoyed a secondary career in Italy cranking out spaghetti Westerns, with little regard to quality. However, 1972’s Grand Duel — aka The Big Showdown — is deserving of its Grand label. No wonder Quentin Tarantino borrowed its sweeping theme song by Luis Bacalov for Kill Bill; you'll recognize it in two notes.
05/20/2013 | Comments 0

The Last Stand

Early in The Last Stand, the small-town sheriff played by Arnold Schwarzenegger says, "It's my day off. Should be a quiet weekend." That's the new way of saying, "I've got one week to retirement," because it signals — with flashing neon and everything — that life is going to royally upend those plans.
05/17/2013 | Comments 0

Texas Chainsaw

One of the most inconsistent franchises in movie history is the one beget by Tobe Hooper's 1974 classic, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. How does one follow all those less-than-beloved sequels? Lionsgate's latest in the series — the seventh — has a solution: Ignore 'em.
05/17/2013 | Comments 0

Captain America: Collector’s Edition

Not long after Batman changed Hollywood in the summer of 1989, every studio wanted to have the next comics-based blockbuster. I remember visiting Penn Square Mall’s multiplex (as I did often back then) and seeing a poster for Captain America. The one-sheet was comprised of little more than a close-up of Cap’s iconic shield and a promise to arrive next summer.
05/16/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · Movies · Action · Unstoppable
Action

Unstoppable


None November 18th, 2010

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With "Unstoppable," Tony Scott ("The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3"), a director to whose hyperbolic stylings I am generally immune, and screenwriter Mark Bomback ("Race to Witch Mountain") have returned to the basics of action filmmaking and concocted a movie that rips along with the speed and power of a runaway train because it's about, uh, a runaway train.

Old number 777 gets away from its numbnuts engineer and ends up zipping along at 70 mph toward an elevated curve in the heart of a Pennsylvania city of 750,000 people. When it hits the curve, it will derail and spill tons of inflammable, toxic chemicals.

The pursuit and stopping of the train ends up in the laps of grizzled engineer Denzel Washington ("The Book of Eli") and newbie conductor Chris Pine ("Star Trek"). Sweating out the chase at their desks are Rosario Dawson ("Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief") and Kevin Dunn ("Transformers: Rise of the Fallen").

Scott is an old hand at filming action, and this picture starts fast out of the station and accelerates all the way to the end of the line. It's one of those pictures you don't see very often anymore, in which the characters are blue-collar types who painlessly teach you something about the way they do their jobs. Nobody is better at playing that kind of guy than Washington, and Pine is no slouch at presenting a conflicted man who has doubts about putting his life on the line.

"Unstoppable" is an everyday thriller that shows us working guys who do what it takes because that's their job. No guns, just guts. "”Doug Bentin
 
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