Runaway Train
audience Reviews
, 76% Audience Score- Rating: 1 out of 5 starsAll these actors must have went to the same school, the school of overacting! The strange part is I enjoy all these actors in their other movie roles. Just two years earlier in Risky Business Rebecca was fantastic but she was like in a high school play in this movie. Jon and Eric were atrocious, it was painful. On top of this it was a thin plot, horrible special effects, I could go on....
- Rating: 3 out of 5 starsLonger and more violent than I anticipated, but sprinkled with some good moments. Voight, Roberts and DeMornay are all good. Not bad.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 starsHeard about this movie from the Adam Carolla podcast. Mr Voight was interviewed, and they discussed this movie. Good watch. The weather would have kicked ALL of their butts on a train. 39 years ago! Hard to comprehend the passing of time. Need to do a dive into Rebecca D's acting resume'. She looked so young and innocent.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsIconic one! It's a very good movie, you can't lose this one!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsMuch more than your average 80s action thriller (though a perfect one at that), Runaway Train is an existential meditation on what it means to be human. Simultaneously exhilarating--it's pacing is as fast as the titular runaway train--as it is philosophical. The ending is as perfect as they come. Broken, tough guy prison hero Manny is accompanied by buffoonish yet likable Buck in their prison escape, hunted down by obsessive, Captain Ahab-esque prison warden Ranken. Ranken and Manny define each other, mirror images, and their existence is defined by the game they play with one another, and who gets the final victory. Manny hysterically screaming "I won!!!" while barreling 90mph towards his demise is as about as poetic, ironic, and ultimately sad, yet somehow true, as anything I've seen. One of the best 80s flicks out there.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsRunaway train is about a train unhinged and hurtling towards disaster through the icy wilderness of alaska. Two law breakers and a stowaway girl who unwittingly choose to ride it must share a common destiny. Aside from the simple premise of convicts making the great escape of their lives and policemen in pursuit, Runaway train engages you in an emotional roller coaster ride through brilliant acting performances from a young John Voight who plays the titular role and his accomplice played by Eric Robwrts. The movie is absolutely about the thrills that puts you in the convicts seat taking the escape ride. However in its short running span of two hours it paints good character stetches of the main protagonists without going overboard on social commentary. Technically it is an accomplished movie. Visually it is an absolute treat to watch with excellent cinematography and beautiful tracking shots in a very inhospitable and difficult terrain to shoot.
- Rating: 4.5 out of 5 starsCharging forward with the momentum of a locomotive, Runaway Train is another incredible concoction by mad lads at Cannon Films. Being based on an unfilmed Akira Kurosawa script, refined and co-written by Edward Bunker (Mr Blue from fucking Resovier Dogs) and then directed by Andrei Konchalovsky, the film is a terrific mix of tightly coiled action and psychoanalysis that remains a wrenchingly intense and brutally powerful watch even now. Before viewing, I only really knew the film in passing due to its influence on Speed and now having watched it, I can confidently say that this is the full embodiment of Dad cinema, I love it. Between the nihilism and the vicious intensity of Jon Voight's performance, the endless charm of Eric Roberts, its outstanding dread-inducing score by Trevor Jones, gorgeous Alaskan photography and spontaneously odd direction, Runaway Train marks not only a high point for Cannon Films but takes great pleasure in delivering a breakneck ride to the end of the line.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsI love this movie, it emphasizes what it is like to live as a convict, and I love how the train is shown as a beast. I would recommend this movie to anyone looking for entertainment!
- Rating: 4.5 out of 5 starsBased on a story by the legendary Akira Kurosawa and directed by Andrei Konchalovsk. Jon Voight, Eric Roberts, and Rebecca DeMornay star in a high speed thriller along the likes of 'Speed' and 'Unstoppable'. In an Alaskan prison called Stone Haven two convicts Manny and Buck are eager to escape. Once they do they board a train hoping to make it scott-free. What they didn't count on what the locomotive having no conductor and it's speeding out of control. So the train is literally a runaway much like them. Manny wishes he could be reformed and he wants Bucky to do the same. Neither of them are sure what to do with their freedom at the moment. A woman named Sara gets caught up in the escapade played by Rebecca DeMornay. She serves as the voice of reason asking these two to work together. Next to that the warden of the prison is hot on their trail but wants to bring them back dead or alive otherwise the prison will be in riot. After all Manny was an idol back in the slammer. The Alaskan setting I like a lot giving you that searing feeling of the cold. You can almost feel the frostbite. The movie has the advantage of constantly moving at break speed so to speak. Exceptional performances by the three leads. It's also very bloody which I was surprised to see. Im pretty amazed how the powerful the music was as well as the ending. Is freedom on the run better than being locked up or dying free? Winning or losing, it's hard to tell the difference. We can act brave but maybe it's only to save face. Despite some implausibilities and logistical issues and some lack of common sense which is funny at times the movie is still intelligent enough to keep you glued to the screen. It's all the characters you see that you care about testing their bravery and redemption. It poses some interesting questions about life and humanity, which explore ideas proposed by William Shakespeare to illustrate the thematic concepts. These moments are when Kurosawa's influence really shines. The central characters are animals in many ways, but they aren't without their moments of pity either. Sadly it's another one of those movies that got overlooked in the shuffle but it really needs some reappraisal today because of its exploration of the human condition and the thrilling set pieces.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 starsThe only thing wrong with the high reviews of 1985's RUNAWAY TRAIN, from both the critics and audience, is that they still aren't high enough! This flick's plot is simple but extremely engaging and exciting. Jon Voight and Eric Roberts were both Academy Award nominees for their outstanding performances and the locations and conditions are real; it must have been extremely intense filming this outstanding movie...! ✨🥴👍✨