by Sony Pictures
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 27079 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $0.71 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | David Carson |
| Release Date: | 2004-11-23 |
| Label: | Sony Pictures |
| UPC: | 043396063440 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | Sony Pictures |
| ASIN: | B00061I294 |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
A former army special ops soldier is mistaken for a government agent. He gets injected with a hallucinogenic mind-control drug that allows people to alter his reality with simple suggestions he must search for the antidote on the run while battling his foes his inner demons & the illusions the drug creates. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 01/27/2009 Starring: Wesley Snipes Jacqueline Obradors Run time: 96 minutes Rating: R
Customer Reviews
PROBLEMS, PROBLEMS, PROBLEMS - GREAT - Reviewed on 2005-03-17
Dean Cage has so many problems -
He is trying to deal with the emotional trauma of causing his friends death.
He is mistakenly identified as a CIA agent at a set-up so the twit injects him with a revelutionary hallucinatory drug that ends up killing its victim.
Cage then explodes into action as he puts the make on the would-be kidnappers and goes on the run.
Hey, I still like that truck, especially those lights. Even I was hanging on for dear life.
It took his friend, Scott's sister, a while to piece together the clues to Dean's new problem. The fading in and out of his vision was a bit distracting but made for the realism of what he was seeing.
Oh yeah, his memories were helping to block the suggestions being made to him. And confusing his tormentors.
Finally, an actress I could really like in her role, she was not overpowering, but feminine and persistent in pursueing Dean to help bring him in safely and determined to save his life.
Where is that dang antidote?
I greatly enjoyed all the actors' in their roles and will be watching it again to see what I missed the first time around.
Will recommend but it is still just a matter of taste. I enjoyed it.
Wesley Snipes in Ordinary B-Action Film - Reviewed on 2005-03-06
4 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
Below-average actioner 'Unstoppable' (formerly called 'Nine Lives' under which title the film is released in some countries) proves that Wesley Snipes, the star of 'Blade' trinity, awfully needs a film with a decent script. I like him, but it is true that he might be heading for the straight-to-video land where many action film stars are gone, and never come back.
Snipes plays an ex-special agent Dean Cage who was in Bosnia, where his last mission went terribly wrong. He managed to come back alive, but is feeling guilty of the past, and his relations with his girlfriend (and a local cop) Amy (Jacoueline Obradors, 'Six Days, Seven Nights') are far from smooth. Sounds familiar? It is, and you have to wait a while for the actions to start.
They start when Cage is mistaken for another man at a diner. Some corrupt guys in suits (and hiding in Baltimore City ambulance ... don't ask me why), misidentifying the target, inject some substance into Cage's body -- making him dizzy and half-unconscious. (Oh, and the film is set in Baltimore, and you see a diner with a big crab, but it was in fact shot in Bulgaria.)
Actions (all standard ones, like shoot-outs and explosions) are not bad, but all the scenes are shot at night, so you might dislike the continuing murky darkness. But the filmmakers seem to have spent most of the budget in showing the so-so actions, for the other parts seem badly neglected, when they should have been more careful about them. The strange, flashy cameraworks only reduce the tension, and in one scene, to express the nasty effects of the injected material, we are to share POV of the ex-agent Cage -- that means, we see the scenes quickly swtching between a hospital office and a military prison one after the other, That is surely unusual, trying to give us the sense of hullcination. But it's only irritating.
Director David Carson ('Star Trek: Generations' -- odd number entry!) throws in these gimmicks, but they cannot completely hide the familiar touch of the underdeveloped B film, or the sense of 'We have seen it before,' especially the last 20 minutes. The baddies played by Stuart Wilson and Kim Coates are just ordinary -- a bad guy in charge of the whole situation, and another bad guy who does dirty business. And as to Wesley Snipes, there is nothing that would remind us of the charisma of the vimpire slayer.
I still remember Wesley Snipes in Spike Lee films, and the entertaining 'Passanger 57' and 'Drop Zone.' And I didn't hate 'Demolition Man.' But watching him in 'Unstoppable' makes me think that he might (just, might for now, OK?) on the way to be the next Seagal. And once that happens, it's really unstoppable.
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Book Subjects
- Action
- Action / Adventure
- Action/Adventure
- Adventure
- Color
- Direct-to-video
- Disturbing
- English
- Feature
- Feature Film-action/Adventure
- Movie
- Ominous
- Paranoid
- Psychological Thriller
- Tense
- USA