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  • Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan play Jeff & Amy Taylor, who are traveling by car across country to California. After stopping at a gas station, they develop engine trouble in the middle of the desert. Desperate, his wife agrees to a ride with a friendly trucker(played memorably by J.T. Walsh), who promises to get them help. When she doesn't return(and after the car starts working again) Jeff drives back into town, only to find to his dismay that not only isn't his wife there, but that they never showed up at all. He does find the trucker, only to be shocked when told by him that he doesn't know what he's talking about! Thus begins a game of cat and mouse, hunter and hunted between Jeff and a particularly nasty gang of kidnappers, demanding ransom.

    Extremely exciting film involves the viewer with the couple's plight right away, and seldom goes wrong. Direction by Jonathan Mostow is efficient and inspired, and the performances really ring true, as does the smart script, leading to a cliffhanging climax.

    Cautionary tale about not going along with strangers works well as a variation on "Duel". Not to be missed.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Too often, movies that start with an intriguing set-up disappoint when it gets to the pay-off as they either simply drift into sheer absurdity or else provide an explanation that lacks any kind of credibility. To its great credit, "Breakdown" doesn't fall into this trap as its set-up provides the introduction to an extremely entertaining action thriller that's full of twists, mystery and suspense. This is an unpretentious film that because of the strength of its plot, some good acting performances and a few well orchestrated action sequences, easily keeps its audience fully engrossed from start to finish.

    Jeff Taylor (Kurt Russell) and his wife Amy (Kathleen Quinlan) are a middle class couple from Boston who are on a cross country journey to a new life in San Diego when they have the misfortune to break down on a desert road far from anywhere. Fortuitously, help soon arrives in the form of an affable looking truck driver called Red Barr (J T Walsh) who offers them a lift to a diner some miles down the road. Amy readily accepts this offer so that she can phone for help but Jeff decides to stay with their vehicle which is a very new looking red Jeep Cherokee.

    After a little time has elapsed, Jeff discovers that the cause of the breakdown was some disconnected wires that are hanging loose below the front of the car. He easily reconnects them and then travels on to the diner where he makes enquiries about his wife. The disinterested and rather unfriendly locals say they haven't seen Amy or Red.

    A little while later, Jeff catches up with Red's rig and gets him to stop but to his amazement, Red denies knowing him or Amy. Jeff then waves down a passing sheriff called Boyd (Rex Linn) and explains what's happened but after making a few checks and talking to the very plausible Red, Boyd is unable to help any further and suggests that Jeff should visit his deputy to report his wife missing. Jeff follows Boyd's advice but this turns out to be just the start of his long and very dangerous search for his missing wife.

    As the audience sees the unfolding events through Jeff's eyes, it makes his frustration, anger and fear very real and it also becomes impossible not to empathise with the terrifying predicament that he's in. There's also an ominous sense of paranoia that develops as the universal lack of concern or help that he receives starts to make his experience appear to be part of a conspiracy and leads one to question how close the links are between Red, Boyd and the unsympathetic people at the diner. When the story moves beyond this point, the reality of what's happening soon becomes horrifyingly clear.

    Kurt Russell very convincingly conveys the mixture of emotions that Jeff goes through during what can only be described as a nightmare scenario and also remains credible as he tackles the various challenges that he encounters. The supporting cast is also very good with J T Walsh and M C Gainey providing the strongest contributions. Kathleen Quinlan does well in her role but has little opportunity to show the extent of her talent due to the limited amount of screen time that she's given.
  • Jonathan Mostow, before he went on to helm the big-budget U-571 and the even bigger budgeted Terminator 3, brought out this taut little thriller and cemented a reputation he's yet to really live up to (though some would disagree about that). His film has that tag-line, but it's not entirely accurate, even though it has a very familiar and eerily recognizable threat at the core: the outsiders coming in to a territory that is very close knit and practically inbred, where one wrong step could cost you and/or your loved ones lives. In this case, Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan are the married couple caught in the cross-hairs of kidnapping, blackmail, and ultimately vengeance. They're moving from Massachusets to San Diego, and driving on through the desert they get side-swiped by a car, then later on after a near-altercation at a pit-stop, they move on only for the couple's car to breakdown. Help comes in the form of a trucker, who offers help for to drive the wife to get a tow-truck. No need for the truck, anyway, because the car didn't have much wrong with it...but what about the wife, Amy?

    From there on in, Mostow takes Breakdown into the realm of paranoid thriller, then into just full-on chase/action/revenge/chase again picture. One might wonder if there could be a more noirish quality to it if the wife actually left for a reason other than abduction, though the path that Mostow takes the story is fine as it is. He keeps things simple in the story sense, with elements of the Western thrown in, but also makes it very much character-based as well. Russell's performance as Jeff Taylor is kind of the opposite of his recent turn as Stuntman Mike in Grindhouse: starting off as the average-Joe who tries to be polite, albeit from a yuppie background, he gets put to the test by the enormity of the situation, and finally becomes a real take-no-prisoners hero. Towards the very end it almost reaches the point of being TOO much of hitting over the head with payback, and there are little things regarding the nature of Red Barr (JT Walsh, great villainous presence in a real sinister, calm way) and his ties to the town as to whether or not things are really as controlling as they might be (i.e. the bank scene, which is perfectly acted, though not entirely feasible in the paranoid sense).

    But all this aside, what Breakdown remains ten years after is a competent, un-pretentious thrill-ride where the dialog is never too heavy, the action is packed with real stunts and few special effects, and some of the brighter moments for Russell in recent years (or rather, the last ten). It knows what it is, and has the professional temerity of a cult effort.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Within the first few minutes, I could tell this movie was a good one. Why? Because the characters choose appropriate actions based on their motives. Here's a few examples:

    (Spoilers ahead)

    When Kurt Russell confronts the guy in the truck at the gas station in the very beginning, and his wife asks him what who he was, in a bad movie he would have said no one. Here he explains that it was the same guy from before, which makes sense.

    It doesn't make sense at first when Russell refuses the ride from the trucker, but it is subtly revealed that he doesn't want to leave his car alone. This leads to his wife going off alone, but only after she forces the issue. Russell's motivations here make perfect sense for his actions.

    After Russell tapes up the bad guy and is pulled over by the cop, in a bad movie he would have put his gun in the cop's face and tied him up too. Instead, he surrendered and asked for help, just like a reasonable person would.

    When Russell latches onto the back of JT Walsh's truck, there's a dramatic sequence where he clings to the bottom of the truck as he makes his way to the front. In a bad movie, this would have led to him climbing into the cab, wresting control of the truck and forcing Walsh to reveal the location of his wife. Instead, he was taking the sensible and important step of getting to a safe and comfortable place to spend the hours-long ride.

    Throughout the movie, Russell tries to call for help. In most movies like this, if an attempt is even made to actually use the police, they are invariably disdainful of strangers, in on it, or both. In the brief period where Russell thinks the cops are in on it, he tries to reach an FBI agent. Apart from the period immediately after the cop got shot, he constantly tries to get police help, just like a thinking human being would.

    These and many other small things are examples of the screenwriters giving characters reasonable motives in unreasonable situations and allowing the action to unfold. In too many action movies the main character forces the plot with completely irrational behavior. The main character here reacts to the plot evenly with the audience, and it makes him a much more sympathetic hero than the typical action movie.
  • An action-suspense R-rated movie featuring Kurt Russell and a bunch of evil kidnappers and extortioners who keep you riveted to your seat wondering what is going to happen next.

    The story has no lulls and when it's over, you're worn out because of the high intensity action start-to-finish. It's actually a little too much.

    Yes, it has it's implausible parts, and the language - mainly by Russell - could be cleaned up considerably - but it's so involving a story you get lost in it. It's decently filmed, too, particularly with the desert scenery in the beginning. J. T. Walsh makes an excellent villain, too.
  • Real gripping thriller, Russell though tends to be a bit of a wimp to start with then starts getting angry, the storyline is good but some of the scenarios are a little disbelieving and you will tend to keep saying things like "How come he has managed to escape and chase them so easily?" "How come she did that?" etc

    The scenery is real nice, fans of road movies will be pleased too with the New Mexico landscapes and long quiet roads.

    Worth a watch! We go into real redneck territory here also. I would like to criticise some of the acting though, the delivery of some of the lines tends to be a tad wooden in places (not so much from Russell) but I don't suppose the all non-star cast could expect Oscars.
  • "Breakdown" is a twist of a thriller and a horror-movie. The story is very good, and you keep asking yourself, what will happen next. Russell and Walsh are making stunning performances, and the movie keeps you attracted for every second.
  • Every time Kurt Russell is in something you can always rely on a solid film. And once again in Breakdown you will not be disappointed. A solid cast with great directing makes this a must see. A great thriller that keeps you second guessing until the end which I love. Russell always puts in the full 100 percent and it shows here again. Why can't actors do what he does like this anymore. Good performances all around make this a tight entertaining watch that you will feel you have not wasted your almost 2 hours. A fast paced thriller that hits the mark at every turn. See this one and you will see how the 90s had great suspenseful films lacking today.
  • This is one of the most intense high-octane movies from start to finish that you will see.

    Not one single boring moment and the runtime and the pacing are just perfect.

    Kurt Russell really shines in this movie and does a really good job in this role. All the actors do a great job honestly, but Russel is the star of the movie.

    Though the action is really well-done, especially for the second half, along with some improbable things that happened, I think it kinda made the movie more "Hollywood action"-y and maybe a little less realistic. Though nothing against that, but I kinda expected this movie to take the more realistic approach and not the Hollywood action-hero route. It's not exactly that, but in the second half, it kinda borders on being an unrealistic Hollywood action film.

    But nonetheless, this movie is a really good time and you will not get bored. It's intense through and through and a great thriller overall that doesn't overstay its welcome. Definitely check it out, you won't regret it.
  • This film is really cool. Basically, a man and wife are travelling and fall victim to some very shady people in a cat and mouse game. As the film progresses, we get plenty of things you would expect if you were in this position yourself, like the people at the diner, and the involvement of the police, who politely inform you that they can't help any further after not much has been done. The scene in the police station where Jeffrey is looking at all the missing people made me wonder: 'how many of these people were involved with the trucker?'.

    He involves the police but as I say they can't really do much, but he's not really all that concerned with those who suspect he's lying; he's concerned with the people who know he's telling the truth!!

    The film also gives you the kind of scenes you need in order to stay interested and 'into it' so to speak, there are great plot twists here and there accompanied by some great acting and very fine action sequences. The scene in the truck with the great M.C Gainey's dialogue about how dumb Jeffrey is raises a lot of questions. The scene in the barn near the end is a real eye opener, when you see all the license plates and items of clothing and so on in boxes hidden in the top of the barn, whose are those? Also when Billy talks briefly about 'that couple in Ohio'. Have they done this thing a lot before?

    Truly great film all around, you never get bored and you can rarely guess what will happen next! I must also compliment J.T. Walsh for giving a great performance as Red Barr, and Rex Linn for his great cameo as the police officer. You know how sometimes you start playing with your phone or keep looking at your watch? Oh no, not this time pal! Great acting, great action, great plot, I'm loving it!! 10/10
  • Most people I've talked to who enjoyed Breakdown will agree that they are typically hooked right away, solely from the opening credits. This movie signals danger the moment it begins and foreshadows it until reality becomes truly insane for Kurt Russell's character. Breakdown takes place in one of the most empty and deadly environments known to man, the desert. Little to no cell phone reception, an incredibly tiny police force, and a ring of psychotic criminals just make for a nightmare situation. This movie feels similar to a nightmare for that matter, and up to the last second you question the fate of these characters. A true blast, I wish IMDb did the 10 scale with .5's because this is a solid 7.5 / 10
  • BREAKDOWN is one of those lower-budgeted, under-the-radar type movies which pop up on late night television to hook and fascinate you. In essence, it's a B-movie with a better cast than usual; one of those films I saw and liked years and years ago and which has stayed with me ever since. I recently revisited the film on DVD and was surprised to discover that it's actually an excellent little action/mystery/thriller and one of my all-time favourites.

    The ever under-appreciated Kurt Russell stars as that classic archetype, the ordinary guy, who finds himself out of his depth when his wife goes missing after hitching a ride with a seemingly kindly trucker. I won't spoil what happens after that, only to saw that the screenplay is absolutely loaded with suspense. Truly, you could hear a pin drop as I sat watching this film, riveted to the screen; the bank scene is the real highlight, but the later antics pay off nicely too. Things culminate with a nicely directed action scene featuring some great car stunts. I'd put this film up with the best of Hitchcock, and that's no joke; it's the type of film I could start watching again straight after finishing, I enjoy it that much.

    Much of the film's success comes from the casting of Russell, whose acting adds immeasurably to the experience. He's one of those instantly identifiable and likable actors who you end up rooting for from the outset, even in more conflicted roles like the one he played in corrupt cop yarn DARK BLUE. If only Tarantino's DEATH PROOF had been more like this movie! Instead, the directorial duties are handled by Jonathan Mostow, his debut picture, and he does a wonderful job. I equally enjoyed his follow-up films, U-571 and even TERMINATOR 3: RISE OF THE MACHINES, although I'll admit that SURROGATES was a little lacking in the substance stakes. J. T. Walsh also does a nice job in a supporting role, and it's fun to see M. C. Gainey given something larger than a cameo for a change.
  • BREAKDOWN (1997)

    Aspect ratio: 2.39:1

    Sound format: Dolby Digital

    After their car breaks down in open country, a married couple (Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan) are pitched into mortal danger when Quinlan disappears after accepting help from a sinister trucker (J.T. Walsh).

    Well-scripted thriller, in which Russell and Quinlan become entangled in a ghoulish extortion plot after falling prey to some less than savory characters (I'll say no more). Believable plot twists lead to a dynamic climax which should have most viewers rivetted to their seats, and which probably accounted for director Jonathan Mostow being hired to direct TERMINATOR 3: RISE OF THE MACHINES (2003). Tense, exciting stuff, worth a look.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I thought this movie is awesome but unfortunately, the movie has A VERY BIG PLOT HOLE when the "WIFE GO WITH STRANGER". Who is in the right mind husband to entrust your wife to a stranger?! Giving away your wife for gangbang huh?! The villain offered a ride to Belle's Diner but he refuses and sends his wife instead!!! How funny LOOOOOOOOL! If he really loves his wife he won't let her out of his sight but since it's just a movie that is unrealistic and poorly written script, then they just stick with that! The only good in this movie is Kurt Russel's acting so I give 1 star :)
  • "Breakdown" is a nice little movie that is straightforward, has characters you truly care about, has a simple setup. And it never flags. And it keeps you guessing. Those are good qualities for movies, especially actioners and thrillers, and ones with this kind of premise. And the film has just enough characters (no more than it needs to have) to keep you involved. If the cops were any help, then there wouldn't be much of a story. It also doesn't take itself too seriously. The bad guys here are interesting, but perhaps if there were only one villain, then the movie could have been longer. I recommend this to anyone who enjoys thrillers that accomplishes a lot.

    ***1/2 out of ****
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Kurt Russell, J.T. Walsh and Kathleen Quinlan star in this 1997 thriller. After their car breaks down, a man desperately searches for his missing wife he believes is kidnapped. Jeff Taylor (Russell) and his wife, Amy (Quinlan) are traveling across country. Soon, their car breaks down in the desert and are helped by trucker, Warren "Red" Barr (Walsh). He offers them a ride to a diner where there's a phone to call a tow truck and Amy volunteers, but Jeff stays with the car. Jeff fixes the car and heads to the diner to find Amy. He asks if anyone has seen her and wonders if she's been kidnapped. Jeff reports to the cops and desperately searches for her not knowing who to trust. Jeff discovers that Red and his men have kidnapped her and must play his deadly game to get her back. This is one of Kurt's best and J.T. was a good villain. I recommend this great thriller.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Jeff & Amy Taylor are on a cross-country road trip, moving from Michigan to California, when their car suddenly breaks down on a remote stretch of highway. When a trucker, "Red" Barr, stops to offer some help, Amy goes with Red to the closest town to phone for a tow truck. Some hours pass and when there's still no sign of a tow truck or Amy, Jeff becomes concerned, so after managing to finally get the car to get going again, he travels to where he was supposed to meet his wife but there is no sign of her. Out on the road again, Jeff comes across the same trucker that was supposed to help the couple, but the driver denies that he's ever seen him before. Adamant to find out what has happened to his wife, Jeff finds himself being caught up in a deadly game for survival and a race against time to find his wife.

    Breakdown is a classic example of a really good, cat-and-mouse action/thriller that doesn't fail to deliver with good performances from both Kurt Russell and J.T. Walsh. Russell brings a nice believability to his character that he's just a normal guy (and doesn't have any ex-forces or martial arts training that so many of these types of movies have for their main "good guy") who's desperate to find his wife, and Walsh is just classic J.T. Walsh in playing a guy you just love to hate.

    The story, while being a wee bit predictable in a couple of places, has enough twists and turns to keep your interest and to keep you guessing as to what will happen next for the most part. The film is also not lacking in suspense or tension either. Does it keep you on the edge of your seat? Well, I guess that depends on how much suspense you need in a film for that to happen, but for me there's more than enough here for the majority of viewers to feel a decent level of tension.

    Mix this with the very believable performances from Russell and Walsh and you have yourself a really good thriller with a nice amount of action. I definitely recommend giving this movie a go.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    For some reason, I've always had a soft spot for what I like to call "Badland Road Movies"—that is, films often set on desolate highways in the Dakotas, wherein an everyman character has to mine unknown resources of mettle and ingenuity to outwork the machinations of fate. In many ways, I think they've become the new noir archetype for our modern world, which I would sketch as follows: Isolated without our toys and buffers (the police are unhelpful and incompetent), other people become tyrannically omnipresent—we are forced to engage with them at eye level, and only in so relating can we reclaim what's ours. It's the ultimate terror for the neighbor-fearing, gun-toting, socially retarded American male of this techno-centric millennium, this portentous saga of a Boston transient (Kurt Russell) who has to outwit primitive locals to rescue his kidnapped wife being an ideal example.

    (*Spoilers* follow.)

    Although there's nothing thematically or formally on display here to distinguish it from, say, The Hitcher or Red Rock West, Breakdown has a white-knuckle third act that completes Russell's metamorphosis from vaguely supercilious yuppie to avenging civilian, and features a heart-stopping duel with J.T. Walsh's trucker that is pretty incredible. Uncharacteristically, the heretofore-objectified wife (Kathleen Quinlan) helps out, making this a more feminist-friendly thriller than much of Hollywood's ragtag assemblage of summer blockbusters.
  • Kurt Russell is excellent in this taunt, thrilling, non-stop action film. Russell plays Jeff, a husband who has to get his wife back after she's abducted by a trucker after their jeep breaks down and she accepts a ride from him. Every actor is almost pitch perfect for the parts they play and the movie was very enjoyable. J.T. Walsh is suitably menacing as Red,in my mind, but this IS Kurt's movie through and through. Mr. Russell has to be one of my favorite actors working today. And this film has to be one of the best 'Chase for family member' type movie in the last decade..HIGHLY recommended

    My Grade: A

    Where I saw it: HBO plus
  • This adrenalin-pumping action thriller is terrifically well crafted with a Spielberg-like glee (ala "Duel"), and features a fine set of villains (ala "Bad Day at Black Rock"). As lead baddie, the late J.T. Walsh gives the movie's best performance. Hero and heroine - in the form of Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan - are the film's flaws, being bland and under-used respectively (she gets to kill Walsh in a silly, slightly unworthy final coda - which seems there only for her to do something significant). From a non-artistic p.o.v., the picture could be labelled bigoted towards mid-west folk, but as an entertainment it's a good, simple (though never simple-minded) actioner - well worth watching.
  • It takes a lot for me to designate a thriller as utterly and completely mesmerizing, but such is the case with the 1997 Kurt Russell vehicle Breakdown. I stumbled upon this gem when it was released on VHS some 10+ years ago, and, as I recently browsed the somewhat deflated selection of films available in my "Watch Instantly" Netflix queue, decided to give it another go. Once again diving headlong into this ballet of desert highway carnage was like getting reacquainted with an old friend; consequently, this has caused me to lament the stale-by- comparison state of many recent "road rage thrillers" offered up by Hollywood.

    If you've never seen Breakdown, it could be described as a more intelligent version of Joy Ride (or, perhaps, The Hitcher). It's about a married couple named Jeff (Russell) and Amy (Quinlan) who are driving cross country—from Boston to San Diego—to take on more lucrative employment opportunities. Along the way, they almost collide with a local in a pick-up truck on a remote desert highway. When they stop at the next gas station, the fella driving the truck—a black-clad hombre with a handlebar mustache and a cowboy hat—proceeds to chew out Jeff for his idiotic behavior behind the wheel. The two eventually call a truce, part ways, and go about their lives. It's not long, however, before Jeff's brand new Jeep inexplicably breaks down. As the couple is trying to assess the situation, a man in an 18-wheeler stops, offers assistance, and eventually ends up suggesting the pair ride with him to the nearest town so they can call a tow truck. Jeff is leery about leaving his car on the side of a highway with a local lunatic on the prowl, so Amy hops in the semi, presumably to wait for her husband at a diner as he figures out what to do. Once she leaves, Jeff discovers the problem, fixes the car, and heads to the diner. When he gets there, though, Amy is nowhere to be found. The locals have no idea who she is, and they all claim to have never seen her. What ensues is a maddeningly wild goose chase across barren southwestern terrain as Jeff does everything in his power to find his spouse.

    There are twists and turns aplenty, and the action is great. The most disturbing thing about the film is how genuine it all seems. I have no trouble believing that something like this could (and perhaps has) occur in such remote locales, and there's a real sense of desperation to everything that's unfolding. Russell is great as the panicked husband who knows he's going to have to take things to the extreme to get his wife back, and almost—almost—every one of his decisions seems completely rational. The movie does give way to certain conventions from time to time, and I wish it would've built up the paranoia just a little longer before the "big reveal" occurs (a la Arlington Road), but there's no denying the intensity on display here.

    That being said, who's ready for a road trip?
  • Kurt Russell is one of those actors that won't win any awards, yet every project he's involved with he is always solid. He is obviously recognisable for iconic characters like snake plissken but what he does equally as well is play the Everyman role.

    Breakdown is one such role where an ordinary couple are thrown into a cat and mouse struggle with some professional criminal anglers looking for ransom money. The pacing is swift and the tension keeps up to the pace. The bad guys are heinous pond life (JT Walsh a particular stand out) synonymous with a lot of 80s and 90s villains - you know the ones you really want to see get their comeuppance! The action is well done - not the over the top CGI fests common place in todays films.

    Like so many thrillers of the decade: unlawful entry, single white female, ransom etc this is Well acted, no convoluted plot, some good suspense and a spot on run time make this well worth a viewing.
  • Kurt Russells character Jeff, search for his wife is reminiscent of The Vanishing and yet there is something else, an insidious violence that declares open season on strangers. Whatever is going on, and you never quite know for certain, it has an ugly echo of the dark side of country.

    This could easily have been a style-washed film noir of the Red Rock West variety. Instead, Mostow remains believable, therefore increasing the tension. He makes you feel Taylor's terror and rage. He makes you breathe fast and shallow. Russell can be beef-caked and plastic films like Escape From New York, Big Trouble In Little China. He can be solid wood Stargate and stiff-upper ed The Thing. What Mostow achieves with him here is remarkable.

    Taylor is not presented in Stallonescope, rather as an ordinary bloke who doesn't know what to do. Russell can slip into stereotype at the scratch of a producer's pen. What makes Breakdown such a convincing ride is his ability to convey fear and courage simultaneously. Taylor's out of his depth. He's scared, but he's going on. Russell throws off the familiar guise, rejects showboat heroics and sweats for real. He's never been better.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Upon seeing the previews of this movie I thought that it would be good. Unfortunately I didn't get to see it until recently and I am quite happy that I did. I quite like Kirt Russell as and actor: the movies that he appears in tend to be very entertaining. I am thinking mostly of Tango and Cash and Big Trouble in Little China. Well, he didn't disappoint me in this movie either.

    Kirt Russell plays a business man moving from Boston to San Diaego with his wife. They have bought a new Jeep Cherokee and are taking the scenic route through the desert. On the way they almost hit a black pickup and the guy is not too happy. After a few words at the petrol station, they leave and break down along the road. A semi-trailer pulls up and offers to give his wife a lift to the nearest town. Unfortunately she never arrives and Kirt manages to fix the car up himself. When he catches up with the Semi, the man says that he has not seen his wife and shows him an empty truck.

    What has happened is that they have kidnapped his wife and are demanding 90,000 dollars, which he does not have, to get her back. Later in the film you discover that these people do this regularly, and even though they are rednecks, they are actually quite deceitful. The truck driver pretends to be a very nice loving man with a family and Billy plays the roll of a slow boy. The other two in the scam are simply muscle and use brute force to get their way.

    It is the start of the movie that is the most chilling because his wife has disappeared and there is no idea as to what has happened to her. Most people say that she has left him but he refuses to believe this. His love for his wife means that he will go to any extent to find her. This isn't a marriage of convenience or lust, but one truly of love. He is willing to put himself in danger to get her back.

    Breakdown is an enjoyable movie. My prediction from the previews was right. It is suspenseful and exciting. It is an action movie with a lot of suspense and the end leaves you gasping for breath. Breakdown is a cool movie and is recommended by me.
  • Supposed to be a thriller Breakdown barely succeeds in being more than a routine MOW. The premise was exciting but the storyline never brings us on surprising grounds. Scenes pile up to build a consistent yet lame story from the nice but already heavy Shining-inspired opening credits down to the final and over-the-top cliffhanger.

    Redeeming features: first and foremost Kurt Russell floats this very forgettable (even disposable) movie and make it watchable. Jonathan Mostow's directing also creates inner dynamics within his own flatly episodic story. Eventually stunts are good but that's what you're bound to demand from a movie where action is the last refuge to make up for the overall lack of creativity. Breakdown wants so much to cash in on action sequences planted here and there in the storyline that stunts occur like the climax of those sequences, ridiculously closing an uninteresting boxing fight with a wrestling tour-de-force.

    If you want to make a thriller, action cannot compensate for the lack of tension; and if you don't have the budget to make a big fat action movie stunt acts will soon look the same or overstretched. That's the big problem here: Breakdown was meant to be a thriller driving to its conclusion with brawn. In fact it gently drives along this straight line across the desert, slowly at first to create tension (i.e. at least some expectations) then aims to shake the audience, alternatively going full throttle then screeching to a halt. That's very cheap and lame.
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