first time seeing this
was on tnt on a day i skipped school
it was phenominal
wait no that was duel
but i love this movie
was on tnt on a day i skipped school
it was phenominal
wait no that was duel
but i love this movie
Saw it in the theater back in 97
I still remember that night because this is such an amazing movie.
One of Kurt Russels best and that's saying something he has done a lot of great movies.
It's a great little movie. I do feel the ending doesn't quite live up to what came before. Once he retrieves his wife and they start chasing them, it just doesn't feel as gripping as everything else. I don't know if that's just inevitable with the plot or if they could have improved it to make it more gripping. I'm kind of nitpicking though.
shareI think Ebert said the same thing actually
yep
I'm recommending "Breakdown,'' but I have a problem with the closing scene I mentioned above. It involves a situation in which a villain is disabled and powerless--yet a coup de grace is administered. There is (or was) a tradition in Hollywood thrillers that the heroes in movies like this kill only in self-defense. By ending as it does, "Breakdown'' disdains such moral boundaries.
I noticed, interestingly, that no one in the audience cheered when that final death took place. I felt a kind of collective wince. Maybe that indicates we still have an underlying decency that rejects the eye-for-an-eye values of this film. "Breakdown'' is a fine thriller, and its ending is unworthy of i
Well I'm not referring to the death of J.T. Walsh's character at the end. I had no problem with them killing him, in fact if anything they showed mercy to a murderer who was willing to steal from them and kill them, by giving him a quick death dropping that truck on him. I was referring to how the film sees out its final chapter with Russell and his wife escaping and being chased down. For one thing it seems a bit rushed and over rather abruptly from when they flee the house to moment on the bridge.
shareI remember this movie. Its so intense I'm afraid to even remember it.
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